Can hysterotomy cure fundus hemorrhage?

Complications from fundus hemorrhage can be improved by vitrectomy; fundus hemorrhage is not cured by glass resection.
A fundus hemorrhage is a lesion that occurs in the retina and may be a direct change originating in the fundus or an ocular alteration of a systemic disease. A simple fundus hemorrhage does not require a borescope. When fundus hemorrhage is combined with vitreous hemorrhage, retinal detachment, or macular disease, a glass excision is needed to remove the blood, restore vision, and reset the retina.
In the case of systemic diseases, such as diabetic retinopathy, simple glass excision can only remove the cloudy vitreous body and old blood, remove the neovascularized membrane, and release the pulling. However, if blood glucose control is poor and diabetic retinopathy continues to develop, it will lead to retinal hemorrhage again, and another surgery is needed according to the condition.
Patients with fundus hemorrhage should be seen as soon as possible and treated aggressively.