Freedom from glasses starts here.
Freedom from glasses starts here.
Freedom from glasses starts here.
A pterygium is a growth of conjunctival tissue that extends onto the cornea. You’ll often hear it called “surfer’s eye” because it’s strongly linked with UV exposure and outdoor environments. For some people it’s mainly a cosmetic or comfort issue (redness, irritation, a gritty feeling). For others, it can start to change the shape of the cornea and affect vision by increasing astigmatism. If you’ve been managing symptoms for a while and it keeps flaring up, or your vision is starting to shift, pterygium surgery may be worth considering.
At City Eye Surgeons, pterygium assessments are planned around what matters most: how the eye surface looks and feels, whether the growth is progressing, and whether it’s affecting vision or the cornea’s shape.
What is a pterygium
What causes a pterygium
Pterygium vs pinguecula
A pinguecula is a small, raised yellowish bump that sits on the white of the eye and does not grow onto the cornea. A pterygium extends onto the cornea and can potentially affect vision. If you’ve been told you have a “growth” but you’re not sure which one, an eye exam can clarify it quickly as symptoms are very similar.
How a pterygium can affect vision
As a pterygium grows, it can pull on and distort the cornea. That distortion can create or worsen astigmatism, which may show up as blur, ghosting, or a more frequent need to update glasses. In advanced cases, if it encroaches toward the visual axis, it can interfere with vision.
Common symptoms include redness, irritation, dryness, burning, tearing, and a foreign body sensation (that “something’s in my eye” feeling). Some people also notice intermittent blur, especially during flare-ups.
Medical reasons for pterygium removal
Cosmetic and comfort reasons
lubricating drops and eye surface care
Managing inflammation
UV Protection to slow progression
The eye surface settles gradually, and it’s normal for the appearance to improve in stages rather than overnight.
Most people find the procedure itself comfortable because local anaesthetic is used. The eye can feel scratchy, watery, and light-sensitive in the early healing phase, but this typically improves as the surface settles.
The surface heals over the first couple of weeks, but redness can take longer to fully settle. Many people notice the eye looks progressively better over several weeks.
This depends on your work environment. Desk work is often easier to return to sooner than dusty outdoor or physical work. Your surgeon will guide you based on healing and comfort.
Conservative treatment can manage symptoms, but it does not remove the pterygium. Surgery is the treatment that physically removes the growth when it is progressing or causing significant symptoms or vision impact.
A toric lens is an intraocular lens designed to correct astigmatism. Whether you need one depends on how much astigmatism you have and your goals for glasses independence.
Rediscover clearer vision
Location: G11-12/566 St Kilda Road, Melbourne VIC 3004
Phone: (03) 9070 0955
Fax: (03) 9978 9426
E-mail: info@cityeyesurgeons.com.au
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