Abstract
We reported the clinical course of refractory childhood glaucoma associated with Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) treated with Baerveldt glaucoma implant (BGI). The patient was a 14-year-old male diagnosed with SWS after birth. He had previously undergone four trabeculotomies for glaucoma and vitrectomy for submacular hemorrhage from a diffuse choroidal hemangioma in his left eye. Before the BGI surgery, his intraocular pressure was 30 mmHg under full medications. The patient experienced extensive serous retinal and choroidal detachments on Postoperative Day 9. The cause may have been the increased leakage of serous fluid from the choroidal hemangioma and the high venous pressure in the episclera due to SWS. Retinal and choroidal detachments subsided within 8 days with conservative therapy. It is important to avoid postoperative hypotony for the treatment of secondary childhood glaucoma due to SWS.