Dacryocystorhinostomy (DCR) is a type of surgery to create a new tear drain between your eyes and nose. You may need this surgery if your own tear duct has become blocked.
Your eyelids have two small openings that drain some of the tears covering your eye. Blinking pushes tears into these openings. From there, the tears empty into a small tube. Then they go into a larger area called the lacrimal sac. This sac leads to the tear duct. This duct drains into your nose.
When this drainage system gets blocked, it may cause a lot of tearing or eye discharge. The blocked duct sometimes gets infected as well.
In most cases, the cause of a blocked tear duct is not known. Other times, the blocked tear duct can be caused by health problems, such as:
- Anatomical problems that were present at birth.
- Long-term (chronic) nasal infections.
- Blockage from a tumor.
- Injury to the nose.
- Conjunctivitis.
- Nose polyps.
During DCR, your surgeon creates a new opening from the lacrimal sac to your nose. The surgeon makes a small cut (incision) in the skin, in the area under your eye and next to your nose. Through this incision, your surgeon creates a small opening in the bone below. This opening then connects your lacrimal sac and your nose. Sometimes the surgeon leaves a small tube there to help keep the new tear duct open.
How to say it
DAK-cree-oh-SIHS-toh-ri-NOS-tuh-mee