Posts Tagged ‘lower blepharoplasty’

Ectropion Repair after Lower Blepharoplasty

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Q : I had my lower eyelids tucked (blepharoplasty) over 6 months ago. While my lower lids look much better, I have had  a problem with dry eyes and tearing since the surgery. It was really bad right after and has gotten somewhat better. It is almost painful to be out in direct sunlight and my eyes really tear if there is any wind. My lower eyelid also doesn’t look right. I think I show more whites of the eye than before and it looks pulled down. My doctor keeps saying to give it more time and it will get better. But it has been some time now since surgery and I just don’t see it happening. What do you suggest? By the way I am a women who is 58 and I still have to work!

A: One of the potential, although fortunately uncommon, risks of lower blepharoplasty surgery is ectropion. This sounds like exactly what you have.

The lower eyelid, unlike the upper, is like a clothesline strung out between the inner and outer eye socket bones. The eyelid is attached to the bone by tendons called the canthal tendons.  This clothesline effect keeps the lower eyelid snugged up against the eyeball just at the lower edge of the iris. By being tight up against the eyeball, it is protected from drying out and being irritated. Any slight change, even one millimeter, between the eyelid and the eyeball (out or down) will cause eye symptoms of dryness, irritation, and tearing. Manipulation of the lower eyelid through surgery can disrupt this relationship if the eyelid and the lateral canthal tendon are snugged back up properly as part of the operation.

While small amounts of ectropion may correct itself with the passage of time and upward massage, six months with this degree of symptoms indicates another approach is necessary. Performing a canthopexy or canthoplasty  (tendon tightening and eyelid re-suspension) and retightening of the outside eye corner can provide an immediate solution to this very irritating problem. Once the lower eyelid is back tight against the eyeball, it will not only look better and more natural but the eye is protected once again.

Dr. Barry Eppley

Lower Eyelid Bags and Blepharoplasty

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Q : I am writing because I am bothered by bags under my eyes. Since I was a teenager these bags have been there but are now much more prominent as I have gotten older. I don’t expect my eyes to be perfect but I shouldn’t look this way at only 38. I have tried every cream out there and nothing seems to make them better. Is there a plastic surgery for this problem?

A: Lower eye bags are the result of herniated eye fat. Most of the time they appear as a result of aging. But some people have it appear much sooner in life, even during their teenage years. One occurs as a result of weakening of a lower eyelid membrane with age, teenage eyebags are the result of a congenital weakness in the same membrane.

To understand lower eye bags, one must know that our eyeball sits in a bed of surrounding fat for padding and protection. The lower eyelid is like a gate in which fat underneath the eye is held back by a membrane between the lower eyelid margin down to the lower edge of the eye socket bone. When this membrane is weak, eye fat can protrude through like a hernia through an abdominal wall defect. This is easy to demonstrate by closing your eye and pressing on the eyeball. You will see that the tissues underneath the eye bulge out as you press in. This is eye fat being pushing out.

Lower eyebags can only be removed by lower blepharoplasty surgery. No topical treatments or other external treatments will cause the fat to go away. If there is no significant extra skin which is common in younger patients, the fat can be removed through an incision from inside the lower eyelid. (trasnconjunctival blepharoplasty). If there is extra skin from aging, the fat and skin are removed through an incision right underneath the lashline. (external lower blepharoplasty)

Dr. Barry Eppley