Lacrimal
Congenital Tear-Duct Obstruction (in Children)
Blocked tear ducts in infants — the usual natural resolution, massage, and when probing or intubation is needed.
Medically reviewed by Noel D. Saks, MDOculoplastic SurgeonLast updated June 2026
Lacrimal
Blocked tear ducts in infants — the usual natural resolution, massage, and when probing or intubation is needed.
Medically reviewed by Noel D. Saks, MDOculoplastic SurgeonLast updated June 2026
Your Surgeon
Noel D. Saks, MD
Noel D. Saks, MD, MD
🏅 ASOPRS Fellow
Part of our complete guide to Tear-Duct & Lacrimal Surgery — this page covers congenital tear-duct obstruction in depth.
Congenital NLDO is one of the most common conditions seen in infants, occurring in approximately 6% of newborns. In most cases, the duct fails to fully canalize at its distal end (valve of Hasner) before birth, leaving a thin membrane blocking tear drainage.
| Presentation | Features |
|---|---|
| Simple obstruction | Epiphora, mucopurulent discharge; most resolve spontaneously |
| Congenital fistula | Abnormal opening in the skin below the medial canthus; may drain tears externally |
| Dacryocele / mucocele | Bluish, tense swelling at the medial canthus at birth from amniotic fluid trapped in an obstructed sac; may require urgent probing |
| Acute neonatal dacryocystitis | Infection of the lacrimal sac in the first weeks of life; risk of orbital cellulitis; requires prompt systemic antibiotics, with probing once the acute infection is controlled (urgent probing may be needed if a dacryocele is present) |
See our overview of congenital eyelid and orbital conditions for the broader picture of conditions present from birth.
Schedule a consultation with Noel D. Saks, MD to learn if this procedure is right for you.