Bleph & Brow Flashcards

1
Q

What are features of an aesthetically pleasing eye?

A
  • positive canthal tilt
  • Smooth arch along eyelid margins
    • especially upper lid, where highest point occurs between medial limbus and pupil
  • Smooth and crisp supra-tarsal crease
    • normal: women 9-12 mm above margin; men 6-9; asian 2-3
  • smooth contours along transitions
    • brow to pre-orbital lid to pre-palpebral/tarsal lid
    • lower lid to midface/cheek
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2
Q

What is the etiology of unsatisfactory eyelids?

A
  • Age related / involutional changes to tissues
    • skin - atrophy, loss of elasticity, redundancy, attenutation of levator-dermal attachments
    • muscle - hypertrophy, festoon, relaxation/ptosis
    • fat - herniation secondary to ligamentous attenuation (Lockwood, orbital septum)
  • Lid ptosis - congenital, acquired
  • Edema - idiopathic, acute, chronic, allergic
  • Brow ptosis (not a true eyelid problem)
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3
Q

Describe anatomic findings associated with aged upper and lower lids

A
  • Upper
    • static / dynamic upper lid rhytids / crows feet
    • lateral hooding / dermatochalasis and “lid skin ptosis”
    • retraction/hollowing of supratarsal crease
    • can be associated w brow ptosis
  • Lower
    • nasojugal fold
    • tear trough deformity - groove overlying orbital rim (intact orbitomalar ligament with overlying fat herniation, underlying malar festoons)
    • malar festoons (redundant orbicularis)
    • excess skin / lax skin
    • orbicularis hypertrophy
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4
Q

describe history for patient presenting with unsatisfactory eyelids

A
  • aesthetic / chief complaint: specific problem, aesthetic vs. functional, goals and expectations of treatment
  • HPI: duration of problem, progression of problem (over time vs within a day), acute & unilateral ptosis, treatments to date, previous injuries or unrelated procedures to peri-orbita
  • Ocular: gross VA, corrective lenses/contacts, previous/planned lasic, dry eye, excess tearing, allergies, history of edema/swelling
  • PMHx: autoimmune or CTD (incl raynauds, sjrogren’s, lupus, scleroderma), DM, thyroid or other endocrinopathy, HTN, bleeding d/o; MEDS/ALLERGIES/SMOKING STATUS
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5
Q

describe your physical exam for patient presenting with unsatisfactory eyelids

A
  • exam will follow: overall/general, ocular, globe, forehead/brow, upper lid, lower lid
  • overall/general: body habitus of patient, excess fat, skin care/quality, sun damage, rhytids, evidence of smoking
  • ocular: gross VA, pupil assessment, EOM, Bell’s phenomenon
    • special: schirmer’s test for dry eyes
  • globe: symmetry, dystopia, enopthalmos, exopthalmos, negative globe vector, canthal tilt
  • forehead/brow: rhytids (vertical, horizontal), resting tone, primary brow ptosis (how much below the rim), compensated lid ptosis
  • upper lid: lateral hood, skin excess/laxity, lacrimal excess, lid ptosis (position at central limbus), excess intra/extra-ocular fat (globe pressure), position of supratarsal crease, amount of pre-tarsal lid show
  • lower lid: nasojugal groove, tear trough, malar bag, orbital festoon, skin excess/laxity
    • special tests: squint test - resolve festoon = ptotic muscle; not resolved then hypertrophic; snap test and distraction test for lid laxity; levator excursion
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6
Q

what are risk factors for dry eye post op after eye lid surgery

A
  • abrnomal peri-ocular anatomy
    • Proptosis, lagophtlamos, exophthalmos, no/poor bell’s phenomenon, dry eye, intolerance of contacts, scleral show, negative vector/maxillary hypoplasia
  • abnormal peri-ocular history
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7
Q

What are the goals of blepharoplasty?

A
  • Both
    • restore youthful appearance
    • judicious excision of excess fat and skin
    • smooth skin
    • be aware of and avoid post-operative complications
  • Upper
    • accuentuation of appropriately positioned supratarsal fold
    • smooth arch to supratarsal fold
    • smooth skin over pre-tarsal lid
    • sufficient pre-tarsal lid show
    • restoration of volume
  • Lower
    • maintain lid position and shape
    • smooth contour from lid to cheek
    • resuspension of excess fat
    • tighten lower lid skin
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8
Q

List treatment options for aged eyelids

A
  • Non-surgical
    • nothing
    • laser, peel, botox
  • Surgical / blepharoplasty - grouped into
    • what’s excised: skin, fat, muscle, combination
    • approach: transcutaneous, transconjunctival
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9
Q

describe your markings for an upper lid blepharoplasty?

A
  • patient is sitting, brow compentation or contribution is eliminated w/ gentle pressure
  • first mark with subtle dashed line the existing supra-tarsal fold
  • then mark the lenticular incision
  • inferior component
    • A - ~ 10mm above margin @ pupil (7mm for men)
    • B - ~ 4mm above margin @ punctum
    • C - ~ 4mm above margin @ or just lateral to LCT
  • then mark superior component - how much to excise?
    • D point is above A point
    • pinch test - leave < 1mm lagophthalmos
    • leave 20mm total brow to margin (therefore >=10mm above D point to brow + 10mm from A point to margin = 20mm)
    • connect to inferior incision apices via lenticular approach, laterally superior point is lateral and following a rhytid
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10
Q

Describe your steps in an upper lid bleph

A
  • informed consent
  • marked sitting as described
  • supine position
  • GA or conscious sedation or local
  • excise skin with scalpel
  • assess need for lateral pre-septal fat excision w/ lateral hood
  • raise thin layer of palpebral/orbicular muscle using steven’s and excise
    • adv: better demarcation of fold, smooth contour of fold, minimizes lid bulk
    • disadv: leaving it preserves fullness
  • assess need for medial fat pad excision - make small septal perforation and gentle pressure on globe; only excise that which herniates through septum
    • ensure repeat local and use bipolar
  • hemostasis
  • closure - running 5-0 prolene
  • Consider adjuncts
    • lacrimal gland pexy
    • lateral brow pexy to supraorbital rim periosteum
    • excision of corrugator
    • lid ptosis correction with open tarso-levator plication/advancement
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11
Q

which patients would you want to consider techniques to emphasize supra-tarsal crease?

A
  • Asian eyelid requesting a crease
  • Crease < 4-7mm
  • Male w/ associated brow ptosis
  • revision
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12
Q

List approaches during blepharoplasty that are described to enhance supra-tarsal crease definition

A
  • 3 commonly described approaches
  • flowers
    • permanent suture from skin, levator and tarsus
  • sheen
    • suture from pre-palpebral OO to levator
  • baker
    • no suture
    • excise sufficient pre-palpebral OO to allow skin to adhere to levator
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13
Q

describe your marking for a transcutaneous lower lid bleph

A
  • from medial limbus, lateral to LCT along a rhytid
  • 1-2mm below margin (subciliary incision)
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14
Q

what makes you decide between transcutaneous vs. transconjunctival approach to lower lid bleph?

A
  • transcutaneous
    • adv: allows for redraping/excision of post septal fat and excision/redraping of excess skin,
    • disadv: external scar (not usually visible),
  • transconjunctival
    • adv: lower risk ectropion, good for excising or redraping post-septal lower lid fat when there is not excess // redundant skin, good for smoothing contour from lid to malar prominence, no external scar, with retroseptal approach
    • disadv: no ability to excise redundant skin, possibility to injure internal oblique at CPF (rare), entroption (rare)
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15
Q

describe your steps and thought process during lower lid transcutaneous bleph

A
  • informed consent
  • skin markings as described while upright
  • GA or conscious sedation
  • globe protection
  • incise skin only along subciliary marking
  • stairstep down to pre-palpebral OO then drop into submuscular (pre-periosteal) plane
  • release the orbital retaining ligament
  • assess the post-septal fat pad and consider your options
    • pull out medial fat pad, suture to I/O margin, reset the septum slightly more inferiorly
    • other maneuvers to re-suspend/re-drape the post-septal fat (suture to periosteum)
    • vs. excision of excess middle, lateral +/- medial fat
  • consider position of canthal tilt and LCT - should we do a pexy or plasty?
    • if vector is negative or lid laxity, to a canthoplasty and release inferior attachment, excise excess and re-suspend slightly over-corrected to whitnall’s tubercle
    • to secure repair or prevent ectroption, consider canthopexy
  • redrape skin-muscle flap, determine amount to excise so closure is tension free
  • consider fat augmentation to smooth lid-cheek junction
  • consider temporary tarsorrhaphy to prevent corneal exposure and ectroption
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16
Q

List complications associated w blepharoplasty

A
  • complications organized into intra-op, immediate, early and late
  • intra-op
    • corneal abrasion, hemorrhage, lacrimal gland injury, oculocardiac reflex
  • immediate
    • hematoma (retrobulbar, periorbital, subconjunctival), VA change/blindess, diplopia
  • early
    • lagophthalmos, corneal exposure, chemosis, skin slough
  • late
    • asymmetry, under correction, over-correction (hollow, “A” frame, scleral show), ectropion, entropion, scar, dry eye, epiphora,
17
Q

discuss your management of suspected retrobulbar hematoma

A
  • rapid focussed assessment doing history and physcial exam simultaneously
    • Hallmark: change to VA, pain, pain w EOM, photophobia, proptosis, increase IOP
  • elevate head of bed
  • calm patient and control BP
  • remove external dressing or suture
  • consult ophthalmology
  • medical interventions
    • IV mannitol -20%, 1-2mg / KG over 30 mins
    • IV diamox (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) - 500mg IV then 125IV q4-6hr
    • topical vs. systemic betablocker
    • steroids (controversial)
  • need urgent re-exploration in operating room
  • if extreme increase IOP, or extreme vision change or not responding to above maneuvers then consider bedside canthoplasty
18
Q

what are risk factors for post-op ectropion?

A
  • subciliary vs transconjunctival
  • malar hypoplasia
  • shallow orbit
  • large globe/proptosis
  • excessive post-operative edema
19
Q

what are causes of post blepharoplasty ectroption?

A
  • technical
    • excessive excision of skin/muscle/fat
    • tension on closure
    • disinsertion of lateral canthus
  • post-op
    • scar/contracture
    • adhesions to septum
    • mid-face descent
20
Q

what would you do if your bleph patient had severe post-op chemosis?

A
  • see/assess to rule out other pathology
  • steroid drops, systemic steroids,
  • tarsorrhaphy
  • ophthalmology consult
21
Q

describe anatomic features of the asian eyelid

A
  • Upper lid
    • Absent or low supratarsal crease
    • medial epicanthal fold
    • hooding caruncle
    • superiorly displaced lateral canthus
    • narrow palpebral fissure
  • Lower lid
    • absent lower lid crease
    • anterior/superior displacement of post-septal fat
22
Q
A