Diabetes damages eyes silently. Timely intervention protects the vision that matters most.
Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of blindness in working-age adults worldwide, but it does not have to end that way. When diabetes damages retinal blood vessels to the point of bleeding, leaking, or pulling the retina out of place, surgical intervention can stabilise the damage and protect remaining vision. Thailand's vitreoretinal surgeons handle the full spectrum of diabetic eye disease using laser, injection, and microsurgical techniques.
Free, no-obligation — you pay the hospital directly with no markup.
Diabetic retinopathy surgery treats the complications of diabetes-related retinal damage. In proliferative disease, fragile new blood vessels grow on the retinal surface and bleed. In advanced cases, scar tissue pulls the retina away from the eye wall. Treatment combines laser photocoagulation to halt vessel growth with vitrectomy to clear blood and release traction.
The management is rarely a single procedure. Most patients with advanced diabetic eye disease require a combination of panretinal laser, intravitreal anti-VEGF injections, and surgical vitrectomy — staged according to disease severity. Thailand's retinal centres coordinate this multi-modal approach under one roof, which matters when the disease is complex and ongoing.
Diabetic eye disease is complex and often requires multiple treatment modalities. Thailand's retinal centres offer the full treatment spectrum — laser, injections, and surgery — coordinated under one team.
Comprehensive
Multi-Modal Treatment
Laser, anti-VEGF injections, and vitrectomy all available at the same centre. No referrals between separate clinics — your retinal surgeon manages the entire treatment pathway.
40–60%
Substantial Cost Savings
Diabetic eye treatment is expensive everywhere. Thailand delivers the same interventions at 40–60% less, making ongoing management more affordable — especially for patients paying out of pocket.
Coordinated
Staged Treatment in One Trip
Multiple treatment sessions — laser, injections, and surgery if needed — can be scheduled within a single trip. This is more efficient than spacing them weeks apart at home.
Integrated
Diabetes-Aware Care
Our partner centres coordinate with your diabetes management team. Blood sugar optimisation before surgery and monitoring during recovery are part of the standard care pathway.
We do not charge for our service — you pay the hospital directly with no markup. Diabetic eye treatment can involve multiple procedures, and Thailand's pricing makes the overall cost of management more manageable.
Your Quote Will Include
Prices are approximate and vary by technique, surgeon, and hospital. Your personalised quote will include a full cost breakdown.
Treatment costs range from $3,500 to $6,300 depending on the complexity and number of procedures required. Laser photocoagulation alone is at the lower end. Complex vitrectomy with membrane peeling, endolaser, and tamponade sits at the upper end. Anti-VEGF injections are priced per injection and added to the total as needed.
The total covers the vitreoretinal surgeon's fee, anaesthesia, operating theatre, laser and microsurgical equipment, tamponade materials, hospital stay, post-operative medications, and follow-up visits. Anti-VEGF injections are quoted separately per injection session. The multi-modal nature of diabetic eye treatment means the total depends on how many treatment modalities your case requires.
Disease severity is the primary driver. Simple panretinal laser costs less than complex vitrectomy. The number of anti-VEGF injections needed, whether silicone oil is required, and the operative time all influence the total. Patients with very advanced proliferative disease and tractional detachment typically fall at the higher end of the range.
Pricing varies by the complexity and scope of the procedure. Typical ranges at our partner hospitals in Thailand:
Exact pricing is confirmed after your consultation and treatment plan are finalised.
Diabetic retinopathy treatment in Thailand costs 40–60% less than in the US ($8,800–$14,000), Australia (A$8,000–A$13,300), and UK (£7,000–£12,300). For patients requiring multiple procedures over time, the cumulative savings from treating in Thailand can be very substantial.
Treatment is staged to disease severity. Not every diabetic eye needs surgery — but when it does, the available options range from outpatient laser to complex vitrectomy. Knowing what each option addresses helps you understand your treatment plan.
Laser applied to the peripheral retina in a scattered pattern causes abnormal new vessels to regress. It works by reducing peripheral retinal oxygen demand, starving the stimulus for new vessel growth. The trade-off is some peripheral and night vision loss — a deliberate sacrifice to protect central sight.
When vitreous haemorrhage obscures vision or scar tissue pulls the retina, vitrectomy clears the blood, releases traction, and stabilises the retina. Endolaser is applied during surgery, and gas or silicone oil tamponade may be needed for detachment repair. Small-gauge instruments (23G or 25G) minimise trauma.
The techniques used depend on the stage and type of retinal damage. Your treatment plan is built from diagnostic imaging — OCT, fluorescein angiography, and widefield retinal photography — that maps the exact location and severity of the disease.
Intravitreal injections of anti-VEGF agents block the protein driving abnormal vessel growth and leakage. Used both as a standalone treatment for diabetic macular oedema and as an adjunct before or during vitrectomy to reduce bleeding. The injections are quick, outpatient, and typically repeated at intervals guided by OCT monitoring.
Modern 23G and 25G vitrectomy systems allow sutureless microsurgery through self-sealing ports. The surgeon removes vitreous blood, peels fibrovascular membranes, releases tractional bands, and applies endolaser photocoagulation — all during a single procedure. Wide-angle viewing and intraoperative OCT guide precise tissue handling.
After laser treatment, mild soreness and blurred vision last a day or two. After vitrectomy, the eye is patched and specific positioning may be needed if gas or oil was used. Pain is typically mild. Continue all diabetes medications as prescribed.
Vision gradually improves, though it may remain blurred while a gas bubble is present. Follow-up appointments assess retinal stability. Continue eye drops and maintain good blood sugar control — this is especially important for healing.
Gas bubble absorbs gradually and vision clears. Light activities can resume. Additional laser sessions may be scheduled if needed. Blood sugar management remains critical.
Visual improvement can continue for several months. Long-term monitoring with your local ophthalmologist is essential — diabetic retinopathy is chronic and requires ongoing surveillance. A detailed care plan is provided for your home specialist.
If gas tamponade was placed, you cannot fly until it has fully absorbed — typically 2–8 weeks depending on the type. If silicone oil was used, flying is permitted. After laser treatment or anti-VEGF injections alone, there are no flying restrictions. Your surgeon confirms travel safety at follow-up.
After laser treatment, normal activities can resume within a day or two. After vitrectomy, light desk work can resume after 2–3 weeks. Strenuous exercise and heavy lifting should wait at least 6 weeks. Blood sugar control should be monitored closely during recovery — stress and changed routine can affect levels.
Diabetic retinopathy is a chronic condition. Surgery addresses existing complications, but the underlying diabetes continues to affect your eyes. Regular monitoring with your local ophthalmologist — typically every 3–6 months — is essential. Ongoing blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol management are the most important factors in preventing further damage.
Diabetic retinopathy surgery carries risks that are influenced by the severity of the underlying disease. More advanced disease means more complex surgery and higher risk. Your retinal surgeon will explain how these apply to your specific case.
The most important modifiable risk factor is blood sugar control. Poorly controlled diabetes increases surgical risk, impairs healing, and accelerates disease progression. Pre-operative optimisation of blood sugar and blood pressure — coordinated with your endocrinologist — helps maximise surgical outcomes.
Yes. Thailand's vitreoretinal centres hold JCI accreditation and are staffed by fellowship-trained retinal surgeons experienced in managing the full spectrum of diabetic eye disease. Pre-operative blood sugar optimisation, intraoperative monitoring, and structured post-operative follow-up are part of the standard care pathway at these centres.
Optimise blood sugar before surgery. Arrive with your most recent HbA1c and blood sugar records. If your diabetes is poorly controlled, your surgical team may coordinate with your endocrinologist to improve levels before proceeding. During recovery, maintain your insulin or medication schedule strictly. Poor glycaemic control during healing increases every surgical risk.
Most patients with diabetic retinopathy require ongoing treatment. This may include additional laser sessions, maintenance anti-VEGF injections, or follow-up surgery. A long-term management plan is created and shared with your local retinal specialist. The goal is to stabilise the disease and preserve as much vision as possible over the long term.
Diabetic retinopathy management requires vitreoretinal subspecialist expertise and access to the full range of treatment modalities. Here is what our partner centres provide.
Our partner hospitals have dedicated retinal departments with the full suite of diagnostic imaging — OCT, widefield fluorescein angiography, and ultra-widefield photography — plus laser photocoagulation systems and small-gauge vitrectomy platforms. Anti-VEGF agents are stocked and available for immediate use. These are comprehensive retinal centres, not general eye clinics.
Our partner retinal surgeons manage high volumes of diabetic eye disease, including complex proliferative cases with tractional detachment. They coordinate laser, injection, and surgical treatment under a single care plan. That continuity is important for a chronic disease that requires adaptive, staged management over time.
Our partner hospitals have endocrinology and internal medicine departments that can assist with blood sugar optimisation before and during your stay. This integrated approach — retinal surgery supported by diabetes management — improves surgical outcomes and reduces complication risk.
Diabetic retinopathy treatment aims to stabilise the retina and preserve remaining vision. The degree of visual recovery depends on how much damage occurred before intervention.
Panretinal laser reduces the risk of severe vision loss by over 50%. Vitrectomy for vitreous haemorrhage often restores useful vision when the retina underneath is intact. Anti-VEGF injections for macular oedema stabilise or improve central vision in the majority of patients. The overall goal is to prevent blindness and preserve functional independence.
Outcomes depend on disease severity at the time of intervention. Patients treated early in the proliferative stage have the best prognosis. Those with advanced tractional detachment or long-standing macular oedema have more limited recovery potential. Your surgeon will set realistic expectations based on your imaging and clinical assessment.
Diabetic eye treatment often involves multiple sessions. A stay of 7–10 days allows for assessment, staged treatment, and follow-up — all within a single trip.
Plan for 7–10 days. This allows for comprehensive retinal imaging, staged laser treatment, anti-VEGF injections, and vitrectomy if needed, plus follow-up appointments. If gas tamponade is used, you may need to extend your stay until the gas absorbs and you are cleared to fly.
Your care coordinator schedules all appointments and manages logistics. The quote covers retinal assessment, surgeon fees, laser and surgical procedures, anti-VEGF injections, medications, and follow-up visits. A detailed care plan for your home specialist is prepared before discharge.
Diabetic retinopathy is a chronic condition requiring ongoing monitoring. Before you return home, your Thai retinal surgeon prepares a comprehensive report including imaging, treatment performed, and recommended follow-up schedule. This is sent to your nominated ophthalmologist at home so there is no gap in continuity of care.
Everything you need to know before your procedure
Patient Care Director
Last reviewed: March 25, 2026
Medical disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Individual results, recovery times, and suitability vary. Always consult a qualified ophthalmologist before making decisions about treatment.
Speak with our care coordinators for a free, no-obligation consultation about diabetic retinopathy treatment.
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