Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study

Background Standard upper blepharoplasty involves removal of both the skin and a portion of the underlying orbicularis oculi muscle. The senior author had observed sluggishness of eyelid closure, lagophthalmos as well as varying degrees of eye irritation in certain patients during the early postope...

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Main Authors: Lee Kiang, Peter Deptula, Momal Mazhar, Daniel Murariu, Fereydoun Don Parsa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2014-09-01
Series:Archives of Plastic Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.5999/aps.2014.41.5.576
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author Lee Kiang
Peter Deptula
Momal Mazhar
Daniel Murariu
Fereydoun Don Parsa
author_facet Lee Kiang
Peter Deptula
Momal Mazhar
Daniel Murariu
Fereydoun Don Parsa
author_sort Lee Kiang
collection DOAJ
description Background Standard upper blepharoplasty involves removal of both the skin and a portion of the underlying orbicularis oculi muscle. The senior author had observed sluggishness of eyelid closure, lagophthalmos as well as varying degrees of eye irritation in certain patients during the early postoperative period. He postulated that these findings could be due to orbicularis muscle excision. He therefore undertook a prospective study 27 years ago comparing standard blepharoplasty on one eyelid to skin-only excision on the fellow eyelid. Methods A randomized, prospective, single-blinded study was designed using the fellow eye as an internal control. 22 patients undergoing upper blepharoplasty procedure requiring greater than 5 mm of skin resection and with no history of ophthalmologic disease, dry eye, or previous eyelid surgery were selected. Upper blepharoplasty was performed with skin-only removal on one side, and combined skin-muscle removal on the other side. Patients were evaluated until six months after surgery except for two patients who were lost to follow-up after three months. Sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos, dry eye and aesthetic result were outcome measures scored by patient survey, the operating surgeon, and a blinded expert panel. Results There were comparable aesthetic outcomes in both eyelids. The incidence of sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos and dry eye syndrome were significantly higher in eyelids where wide segments of muscle had been resected. Conclusions Muscle-sparing upper blepharoplasty produces similar aesthetic outcomes as conventional blepharoplasty, while significantly reducing the complications of sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos and dry eye disease. The authors therefore recommend muscle-sparing upper blepharoplasty.
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spelling doaj.art-791c72a2166d465790dbf055139e25b32022-12-22T04:02:01ZengThieme Medical Publishers, Inc.Archives of Plastic Surgery2234-61632234-61712014-09-01410557658310.5999/aps.2014.41.5.576406Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative StudyLee Kiang0Peter Deptula1Momal Mazhar2Daniel Murariu3Fereydoun Don Parsa4Department of Ophthalmology, W.K. Kellogg Eye Center and Visual Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USADepartment of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Hawaii, John A Burns School of Medicine, Honolulu, HI, USADepartment of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Hawaii, John A Burns School of Medicine, Honolulu, HI, USADepartment of Plastic Surgery, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USADepartment of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Hawaii, John A Burns School of Medicine, Honolulu, HI, USABackground Standard upper blepharoplasty involves removal of both the skin and a portion of the underlying orbicularis oculi muscle. The senior author had observed sluggishness of eyelid closure, lagophthalmos as well as varying degrees of eye irritation in certain patients during the early postoperative period. He postulated that these findings could be due to orbicularis muscle excision. He therefore undertook a prospective study 27 years ago comparing standard blepharoplasty on one eyelid to skin-only excision on the fellow eyelid. Methods A randomized, prospective, single-blinded study was designed using the fellow eye as an internal control. 22 patients undergoing upper blepharoplasty procedure requiring greater than 5 mm of skin resection and with no history of ophthalmologic disease, dry eye, or previous eyelid surgery were selected. Upper blepharoplasty was performed with skin-only removal on one side, and combined skin-muscle removal on the other side. Patients were evaluated until six months after surgery except for two patients who were lost to follow-up after three months. Sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos, dry eye and aesthetic result were outcome measures scored by patient survey, the operating surgeon, and a blinded expert panel. Results There were comparable aesthetic outcomes in both eyelids. The incidence of sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos and dry eye syndrome were significantly higher in eyelids where wide segments of muscle had been resected. Conclusions Muscle-sparing upper blepharoplasty produces similar aesthetic outcomes as conventional blepharoplasty, while significantly reducing the complications of sluggish eyelid closure, lagophthalmos and dry eye disease. The authors therefore recommend muscle-sparing upper blepharoplasty.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.5999/aps.2014.41.5.576blepharoplastyptosisdry eye syndromes
spellingShingle Lee Kiang
Peter Deptula
Momal Mazhar
Daniel Murariu
Fereydoun Don Parsa
Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
Archives of Plastic Surgery
blepharoplasty
ptosis
dry eye syndromes
title Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
title_full Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
title_fullStr Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
title_full_unstemmed Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
title_short Muscle-Sparing Blepharoplasty: A Prospective Left-Right Comparative Study
title_sort muscle sparing blepharoplasty a prospective left right comparative study
topic blepharoplasty
ptosis
dry eye syndromes
url http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.5999/aps.2014.41.5.576
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