Macular Hole
What is it?
Are there different types?
What are the symptoms?
What is the cause?
What is the prognosis?
How is it diagnosed?
Is there a treatment?
What is it? Top
A macular hole is a defect or opening in the retinal tissue in the center of the macula. The macula is the part of the retina that provides us with the center of our field of vision - the part we need to read with, recognize faces, or thread a needle. Most patients with macular holes are over 60 years of age, and they occur more frequently in women than men.
Are there different types? Top
Macular holes can be partial thickness or full thickness. Partial-thickness holes do
not involve all the layers of the retina, while full-thickness holes do.
What are the symptoms? Top
Patients with a macular hole notice a central blur, which gradually progresses to a central blind spot in the affected eye. Since the macular hole is an area of missing tissue in the center of the retina, it results in an area of missing sight in the center of the vision. Imagine a ping-pong ball suspended in front of your eye, blocking your central sight. The side vision would be fine, but the central area would be missing. Symptoms are best appreciated when the better eye is covered and may not be noticeable with both eyes open.
What is the cause? Top
The vast majority of macular holes are idiopathic - meaning there is no known cause. We believe they occur when there is an abnormally strong adhesion or attachment between the gel in the eye cavity (vitreous) and the macula. When the gel begins its normal aging process of shrinkage, it pulls on the macula where it is firmly attached. If the pulling continues without the gel peeling free from the retina, the macula undergoes changes, resulting in a circular defect - the macular hole. This is comparable to fabric on a pants leg gradually fraying and thinning until a hole is present by the knee.
What is the prognosis? Top
Macular holes never result in total blindness - at the worst they cause a central blind spot. Eyes with a macular hole can become legally blind, but usually deteriorate no worse than 20/400 - the level of vision allowing us to see the large letter E at the top of the vision chart.
How is it diagnosed? Top
A comprehensive eye examination, usually with dilating drops, is necessary to diagnose
a macular hole. A number of disorders can cause a central blind spot, and some are
more urgent to treat than others. Any patient with a central blind spot should be
evaluated as soon as possible. Occasionally, fluorescein angiography is used to
differentiate macular holes from other disorders.
Is there a treatment? Top
An operation called
vitrectomy may successfully restore some of the lost central sight in patients with macular holes.
The White Eye Associates' ophthalmologist who specialize in diagnosing and treating
retina & vitreous disorders is
Michael J. Barondes, M.D.
Return to Retina & Vitreous Disorders