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About Us |
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Patient Education |
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Photo Gallery |
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The ASPS
Patient Photo Gallery currently includes
before and
after surgery pictures. |
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Eye |
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NORMAL |
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Ideally, there is no extra
skin, or fold, in the upper lid. There is a natural
crease in the center of the upper lid, demonstrating the
roundness in the eye.
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There are no bags hanging from
below the lower lid.
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The eyebrow is positioned above
the bone that forms the upper ridge over the eye.
COMMENT: The eyes are an important center of
beauty. High eyebrows are a sign of youth. If you
look in a beauty magazine, you can verify that the models
invariably have high brows. An extra fold in the
upper lid can begin at any age, even childhood. Many
young models and actors have eyelid surgery to correct
this. In some sense, the goal of upper lid surgery is to
allow women to wear makeup. Bags or fullness below
the eye, referring to the out-pouching from below the lower
lids, can also begin at an early age.
Oriental eyes are a completely different aesthetic
consideration. The eyelid design may be considered a
desirable ethnic characteristic. There are simple
operations designed to eliminate these features if the patient
prefers them changed. |
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SELF-EVALUATION: |
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Check your brow position.
Are they symmetric? Feel the ridge of bone underneath
the brow. Where is it placed relative to that bone?
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Pull up directly over the brow
to see how high it will go.
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Is there extra-skin of the upper
lid? Grasp it and pull out. Do the upper lids rest
on the eye lashes? This is the final stage of lid
drooping.
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Pull up on the sides of your
forehead. Does this correct the eyelid fold? Does
it also correct a low brow or is the brow now too high?
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Take a blunt tool, like a
pencil, and press in on the bag below the lid. Try to
envision the crease developed by removal of the bag.
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HOW MUCH
CAN BE IMPROVED?
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Often the extra skin in the
upper lid is a consequence of a sagging forehead. If the
eyebrow position is improved and the extra lid skin is also
reduced when you pull on the forehead, it may be advisable to
have some form of forehead lift done in place of or in
addition to eyelid surgery.
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Bald men with saggy eyebrows
have few places to hide the scar. Sometimes the incision
is made directly in the brow or in a wrinkle of the forehead.
Brow position may be limited by the tension in the forehead.
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Upper lid skin can be removed
fairly generously until the fold is gone. However, the
eyelid must be able to close completely and this may require
some fold to remain.
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Lower lid bags can be completely
eliminated. When the bags are gone, excess skin may fall
into the new crease and tighten.
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Lower lid wrinkles are a
difficult problem. Unfortunately, tightening the lower
lid skin is filled with potential complications, like the lid
pulling away from the eye.
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If you wear contact lenses, dry
eyes after eyelid surgery can be a problem. The surgeon
must be conservative.
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Women with high brows requesting
a forehead lift may have a problem with a brow position that
is too high.
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VARIOUS SURGERIES |
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Eyelid Surgery
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Blepharoplasty
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THE OPTIONS :EYELIDS/
EYEBROWS |
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THE GOALS OF EYELID SURGERY- UPPER LIDS
VERSUS LOWER LIDS
Surgery of the eyelids can be a very complex subject.
From the surgeon's point of view, there are hundreds of
articles and books written about eyelid surgery
technique. Here, we hope to review some of the basic
ideas and explain what you should expect. The problems with the upper and lower eyelids tend to
be different. The upper lid develops extra skin with
age. In women, the goal of the upper lid
blepharoplasty is usually to remove skin so that they can wear
make-up in the eyelid fold. As people get older, the
upper lid skin may also interfere with vision. In lower lids the problem is usually bags. These are
from extra fat pouching the skin outward. Although the
extra skin from the bag may also seem to be a problem, it
usually tightens underneath the curve of the eye socket when
the fat is removed.
INCISIONS FOR UPPER LID
SURGERY
Surgery itself follows some standard guidelines,
though some aspects may vary from patient to patient.
Routinely, upper lid surgery must go through the skin.
There is no place to do this without an incision, although
these edges usually heal up virtually invisibly. The
incisions almost invariably ends up about seven or eight
millimeters above the eyelashes. How far the doctor carries the incision past the corner of
the eye depends on the amount of skin to be removed and their
personal preference. The degree of scarring has to do
with the quantity of skin removed. The more skin that is
removed, the greater the risk of scarring. Patients
need may need to accept some trade-off.
LOWER LID INCISIONS-
OUTSIDE VERSUS INSIDE (SCAR LESS)
There are two general approaches
to the lower lids. One is through this skin, or the external
incision, and the second is the internal of "scar less"
incision. The external incision goes about two millimeters
below them the lower lashes in a crease and extends about a
centimeter past the corner of the eye. The "scar less" or the sub conjunctival
incision goes on the inside of the lid. If you pull down
on your lower lid, you will see the pink area on the inside in
which that incision is made. There are several differences
between these two incisions. Through the inside
incision, only fat can be removed. Through the outside
incision, skin and muscle may also be removed. In many
patients, particularly younger patients, removal of fat alone
is adequate and can produce a tremendous cosmetic improvement.
However, in older patients with a large among of extra skin,
it may be desirable to remove a small skin strip from the
edge. Some patients prefer the scar-less incision no matter
what the result. The wrinkles of the lower lid can be
treated with skin peeling to enhance the result.
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EYELID
AFTERCARE
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NOTIFY YOUR DOCTOR immediately
of any loss of vision other than from swelling of the lids.
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NOTIFY YOUR DOCTOR immediately
of any unusual pain in one eye more than the other.
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EYELID SURGERY COMPLICATIONS
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1. BLINDNESS / LOSS OF VISION-
Fortunately, this is rare after eyelid surgery.
It occurs from bleeding behind the eyeball causing pressure on
the nerve that carries vision. If it is drained early,
usually permanent loss of vision can be avoided. If you notice one eye being pushed out significantly
more than the other eye or a great deal more pain in one eye
than the other, CALL YOUR DOCTOR IMMEDIATELY.
2. DRY EYES-The incisions
in the eyelids may interfere with the drainage of the tear
glands. If you wear contact lenses, this may be a
problem. You may need to get your tearing checked before
surgery.If your eyes don't close well because of the skin that has
been removed, dry eyes may follow. You may need revision
surgery.
3. ASYMMETRY- Usually, the doctor measures each eye to take out the
same amount of fat, skin, and muscle. You may need a
small touch up to balance them out if it doesn't appear
even.
UPPER LIDS
1. MILIA-
Small bumps, skin cysts, may form in the lid where
skin glands were cut. The surgeon can pluck these out
for you.
2. SCARRING- Usually the incision heals in the natural crease
above the eye and is completely hidden. Even the crows
feet area heals well.
3. EXCESS SKIN- If your surgeon is conservative, they may expect to
trim off some additional skin on a later date. This is
usually a small procedure.
LOWER LIDS
1. EVERSION OF LID (ECTROPION)-Too much skin was removed or excess scarring has
forced the lid outward. A small revision procedure can
shorten it and tighten the rim.
2. PERSISTENT BAGS- Fat remains.
3. CORNEAL SHOW- Too much of the white below the iris
is exposed because the lower lid is pulled down. Some
sort of lid suspension procedure is needed to repair this .
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New Page 1
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About Surgery |
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Areas of
surgery |
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Planning your surgery |
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