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 Jon Caster, 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 Jon Caster, MDOculoplastic SurgeonLast updated June 2026
Your Surgeon
Jon Caster, 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 Jon Caster, MD to learn if this procedure is right for you.