Your treatment may vary according to the severity of your keratoconus. Your treatment choices may also vary according to your specific type of keratoconus.
Early on, you may only need to wear glasses to correct the visual defect from your keratoconus. Special contact lenses are another choice if glasses don't work. Often these are gas-permeable contacts. These require careful fitting to your cornea.
Many people won't need any other treatment. But if your cornea gets too scarred or can't handle a contact lens, you may need another kind of treatment. The traditional treatment in this situation is a corneal transplant. This surgery removes part or all of the original corneal thickness. It's replaced with the cornea from a donor who has died (cadaver donor).
More recently, eye doctors have developed other surgery choices to treat keratoconus. They both can help improve your vision. They include:
- Artificial rings placed inside your cornea (corneal ring segments)
- Artificial lenses placed inside your eye
- Stiffening the cornea by placing eye drops containing riboflavin on the cornea, then shining an ultraviolet light on the cornea (corneal collagen cross-linking)
Sometimes eye doctors will use a mix of treatments for better results. Each of these procedures has its own risks and benefits. Ask your doctor about what treatment or treatments make sense for you.