Last thursday (2 June) I underwent a surgical procedure to have "Mini Monoka Stents" placed into both lower punctas. My occuloplastic surgeon and I decided on them because:
# I refused "smart plugs" due to the negative press I've read on them and having tried Duraplugs with no effect.
# My left lower and upper puncta's have been over dilated due to DCR surgery so most external punctal plugs won't fit me. In fact, the largest plug Eagle makes fell out!!
# I refuse intracanalicular plugs because I don't want to risk them migrating into the tear sac.
So the "Mini Monoka Stents" although usually used to repair canaliculus lacerations, are like an external punctal plug, but a softer material and easier on the eye. They start at the puncta (I can slightly feel them on my eyeball) and bend with the puncta into the canaliculus (like an elbow) and continue into the tear sac. So they are rather long. Still, they are not guaranteed to prevent tear flow my surgeon said. But she is extremely good and I'm sure she'll find a way to tighten them or work on another solution.
During the surgery she had to use a high powered microscope to "tighten" my lower puncta since it was so widely dilated. She had to cut some of the puncta and use micro stitches and I had to wear a patch for one day on the left eye (where the DCR surgery had damaged it in 2007). Currently using Antibiotic and anti-inflammatory drops in the left eye. It feels a bit uncomfortable on the eyeball as I can feel the surgical site.
I have had no discomfort with the stent in the right eye, just a 'slight' sensation of the soft stent cap.
# I refused "smart plugs" due to the negative press I've read on them and having tried Duraplugs with no effect.
# My left lower and upper puncta's have been over dilated due to DCR surgery so most external punctal plugs won't fit me. In fact, the largest plug Eagle makes fell out!!
# I refuse intracanalicular plugs because I don't want to risk them migrating into the tear sac.
So the "Mini Monoka Stents" although usually used to repair canaliculus lacerations, are like an external punctal plug, but a softer material and easier on the eye. They start at the puncta (I can slightly feel them on my eyeball) and bend with the puncta into the canaliculus (like an elbow) and continue into the tear sac. So they are rather long. Still, they are not guaranteed to prevent tear flow my surgeon said. But she is extremely good and I'm sure she'll find a way to tighten them or work on another solution.
During the surgery she had to use a high powered microscope to "tighten" my lower puncta since it was so widely dilated. She had to cut some of the puncta and use micro stitches and I had to wear a patch for one day on the left eye (where the DCR surgery had damaged it in 2007). Currently using Antibiotic and anti-inflammatory drops in the left eye. It feels a bit uncomfortable on the eyeball as I can feel the surgical site.
I have had no discomfort with the stent in the right eye, just a 'slight' sensation of the soft stent cap.
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