N E Srouji, MD operates a solo retina practice in Oklahoma City focused on medical and surgical retinal conditions, serving as a specialist-level provider for patients with conditions ranging from diabetic retinopathy to retinal detachment repair.
This is a retina-only specialty practice. Retinal specialists manage conditions of the back of the eye—the light-sensitive tissue responsible for vision. Srouji handles both medical management (injected medications for wet macular degeneration, diabetic macular edema, retinal vein occlusion) and surgical repair (detachment, epiretinal membrane removal, complex vitreous surgery). This is not a general ophthalmology practice and does not perform cataract surgery or routine eye exams for glasses prescriptions.
Srouji's scope includes intravitreal injection therapies (anti-VEGF agents, steroids), vitrectomy for floaters and advanced diabetic disease, pneumatic retinopexy for select detachments, laser procedures, and consultation for age-related macular degeneration management. Patients typically arrive at this practice already diagnosed by a general eye doctor or having been referred after urgent symptoms like a sudden increase in floaters or flashing lights—the red flags for detachment.
Pricing for retinal procedures varies significantly by procedure type and insurance. Anti-VEGF injections in-office typically range from $200 to $800 out-of-pocket depending on your plan and deductible status; Medicare covers the drug cost but charges a facility fee. Vitrectomy, when surgery is required, involves facility and surgeon fees that can total $3,000 to $5,000 after insurance, but this price point is typical across Oklahoma City specialists in the field. Confirm your out-of-pocket liability with the office before scheduling, as insurance classification and remaining deductible heavily shape your actual cost.
Oklahoma City's retina specialist landscape is small but functional. In addition to Srouji, retinal surgery and medical retina services are available through the larger practices affiliated with OU Medicine's ophthalmology department and through Dean McGee Eye Institute's retina section, both of which operate multiple physicians and may have shorter wait times during high-demand periods. Srouji operates independently, which often means less institutional delay for established patients but potentially longer wait times for urgent new-patient referrals if the practice is at capacity. Choose Srouji for the continuity of seeing one specialist over time, or choose a larger group practice if you anticipate needing rapid access to back-up physician coverage or advanced technology (OCT imaging, wide-field angiography) that may be more reliably available at a multi-site center. For routine retinal monitoring of stable conditions like treated wet AMD, either model works; for time-sensitive surgery (retinal detachment), call ahead and ask wait time explicitly.
This is appropriate for patients with a confirmed or suspected retinal condition, already referred by an optometrist or primary eye doctor. It is not the place for a first comprehensive eye exam, glasses fitting, or evaluation of dry eye or cataracts. You need a referral from another eye care provider or a self-referral with a clear symptom history (flashing lights, new floaters, blurred vision in one spot, or known macular degeneration). If you are uninsured or underinsured, ask about cash-pay pricing for injections before your visit; some retina practices discount the facility component when insurance is not involved, though costs remain material.
Expect a dilated eye exam with optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging to map the retina. The visit typically runs 60 to 90 minutes if you include imaging and waiting. Bring your insurance card, current medication list, and any previous eye imaging or records from your referring doctor. If you require injections, these are performed the same day; plan 30 additional minutes. Dilation makes reading and driving temporarily unsafe; arrange a driver or rideshare if you use dilating drops.
Srouji's practice operates during standard business hours, typically Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with occasional half-day closures. Confirm current hours and any lunch-hour closures before traveling. Parking at the practice location is accessible; call ahead if you need wheelchair access or accommodations. Lead times for routine follow-ups typically run 4 to 8 weeks; urgent referrals for detachment or sudden vision loss are flagged for faster scheduling.
A solo retina specialist offers continuity and direct access in a field where management of chronic retinal disease benefits from ongoing physician relationship and consistent decision-making.
