Glaucoma implant complications and petrolatum eye ointment warning explained
New Nagoya University eye research links common petrolatum-based eye ointments to PRESERFLO MicroShunt risks and glaucoma implant rupture
Learn how to check your medications, monitor for eye ointment side effects, and protect your glaucoma surgery safety
How petrolatum-based eye ointments can cause swollen glaucoma shunts and increase the risk of PRESERFLO MicroShunt ruptureWhat the new Nagoya University glaucoma treatment news means for patients with drainage devices or planned glaucoma surgerySpecific steps to review your own eye ointment prescriptions and compare them with current glaucoma implant safety warningsHow to use the FDA MedWatch database to track glaucoma drainage device and ophthalmic ointment safety communications over timeWhich key questions to ask your ophthalmologist about ocular medication safety and safer alternatives to petrolatum-based ointmentsHow to document and report suspected eye ointment side effects that might affect glaucoma implantsWarning signs and symptoms that may suggest glaucoma implant complications after starting a new eye ointmentPractical strategies to partner with your eye care team to balance infection control, inflammation management, and long-term glaucoma surgery safety