Hello. This is a very complex situation, and I understand how concerning it must be for you and your family. From the history you have provided, the sequence of events suggests that the optic nerve/chiasm has suffered significant stress, first from the pituitary macroadenoma itself and then from the postoperative hematoma that required urgent re-exploration.
The important points in your case are:
Before the first surgery, there was still 40–60% useful vision in the affected eye.
After the first surgery, vision worsened due to a postoperative hematoma causing compression.
After the second surgery, vision improved immediately, which is an encouraging sign because it suggests that at least some optic pathway function was preserved.
The subsequent deterioration over the next 24 hours, despite satisfactory imaging and preserved pupillary responses, raises the possibility of:
Postoperative optic nerve/chiasmal edema (swelling)
Temporary impairment of blood supply to the optic apparatus
Delayed ischemic injury
Inflammatory changes after decompression
The fact that:
Light perception is still present Pupillary reactions are normal Imaging reportedly shows no recurrent hematoma Doctors have specifically identified postoperative swelling There has been improvement with steroid treatment
…are all somewhat reassuring findings. They suggest that the optic pathway may not be completely irreversibly damaged.
However, it is important to understand that visual recovery after pituitary surgery can take days to weeks and sometimes even months, especially when there has been repeated compression from both the tumor and postoperative bleeding.
At this stage, the most appropriate management usually includes:
Close follow-up with the neurosurgical team Regular neuro-ophthalmology assessment Monitoring visual acuity and visual fields Continuing steroids exactly as prescribed Repeat MRI if there is any further deterioration or if the clinical picture changes
Factors that may favor recovery include:
Presence of light perception Normal pupillary reflexes Immediate visual improvement after clot evacuation Early intervention for the hematoma
Factors that make prognosis more guarded include:
Severe current vision loss Recurrent postoperative decline The duration of optic nerve compression before definitive relief
Unfortunately, no doctor can accurately predict the final visual outcome at this point. Some patients experience gradual improvement over weeks, while others may have incomplete recovery. The next few weeks of observation and serial ophthalmological examinations are often very important.
Final Advice:
1. Continue steroids exactly as prescribed by the treating team.
2. Maintain close follow-up with both the neurosurgeon and a neuro-ophthalmologist.
3. Request formal visual acuity and visual field assessments at follow-up visits.
4. Seek urgent reassessment if there is complete loss of light perception, worsening headache, altered consciousness, or new neurological symptoms.
5. Understand that, although the prognosis is uncertain, the presence of light perception and previous immediate postoperative visual recovery provide some reason for cautious optimism.
Given the complexity of this case, the treating neurosurgical team remains best positioned to guide further management because they have access to the operative details and serial imaging studies.
Feel free to reach out again.
Regards, Dr. Nirav Jain Family Medicine Specialist
Hello
The fact that vision improved immediately after the second surgery and then declined again within 24 hours, while imaging shows no new bleeding and the pupil remains reactive, suggests that postoperative swelling of the optic nerve or optic chiasm may be contributing to the vision loss. This is encouraging in the sense that swelling-related visual impairment can sometimes improve gradually over weeks to months, especially when treated with steroids.
However, vision limited to light perception only is still a very serious finding. Recovery is difficult to predict and depends on factors such as the degree of optic nerve compression before surgery, the duration of vision loss before treatment, and whether permanent nerve injury occurred. The improvement seen immediately after clot removal suggests that at least some visual pathways were functioning at that time, which is a favorable sign.
The patient should continue close follow-up with the neurosurgeon and neuro-ophthalmologist, take steroids exactly as prescribed, and undergo any recommended visual field testing or repeat MRI scans. If there is any further deterioration, severe headache, new neurological symptoms, or loss of light perception, urgent reassessment is required.
Since the second surgery was only 1–2 weeks ago and the patient reports overall improvement on steroids, it may still be too early to determine the final visual outcome. Some patients experience gradual recovery over several weeks or even months, but ongoing specialist monitoring is essential.
Take care Feel free to talk
this is a serious postoperative visual problem that needs close follow-up with your treating neurosurgical and ophthalmology teams, but the details you provided contain some cautiously reassuring features. The fact that vision returned clearly immediately after the second surgery suggests that the optic pathway was at least able to function after decompression, which means permanent irreversible damage is not certain. The later decline to light perception only, with normal pupil reaction, reassuring imaging, no ongoing clot, and doctors identifying postoperative swelling and treating with steroids, raises the possibility that inflammation, edema, temporary optic pathway dysfunction, reduced blood supply, or postoperative changes are contributing rather than a new compressive bleed. Recovery of vision after optic pathway compression can sometimes take weeks to months, and improvement is not always immediate.However, because you are currently only able to detect light and it has been 1–2 weeks without change, ongoing specialist reassessment is important. Continue all medications exactly as prescribed and keep follow-up appointments. Ask your team directly whether they have evaluated visual acuity trends, visual fields, optic nerve appearance, MRI (if appropriate), and whether neuro-ophthalmology has reviewed the case. Seek urgent reassessment sooner if vision worsens further, the other eye changes, severe headache develops, or new neurological symptoms appear. Overall, recovery is still possible, but light-perception-only vision after pituitary surgery is significant and requires continued specialist monitoring rather than watchful waiting alone.
