Good vision can be restored in patients with Fuchs’ dystrophy. Treatments will vary depending on the stage in which it was diagnosed. The frequency of follow up visits to your doctor will also vary. Early stages may involve annual visits, however, more developed cases or certain treatments may require visits every few months or more.
If Fuchs’ dystrophy is not affecting your sight then you do not need to receive treatment. If your vision is mainly affected in the early stages of the day, saline solution in drops and ointments can sometimes help by drawing out fluid from your swollen cornea.
If corneal blisters develop then you may be prescribed tablets to help with the pain or comfort you may be experiencing. Soft bandage contact lenses may also need to be worn both day and night, to relieve any pain by protecting exposed nerve endings on the surface of the cornea prior to receiving a transplant.
Since 2000, selective corneal transplantation techniques have been developed which allow surgeons to replace the damaged endothelial layer with healthy tissue through a small, structureless incision in an operation similar to modern cataract surgery.