TY - JOUR
T1 - Experience with tarsal suspension as a factor in lower lid blepharoplasty
AU - Lisman, Richard D.
AU - Rees, Thomas
AU - Baker, Daniel
AU - Smith, Byron
PY - 1987/6
Y1 - 1987/6
N2 - The bowed lower eyelid, with scleral show, is a common but untoward result following blepharoplasty with even minimal skin excision. A number of conditions, unrecognized preoperatively, can predispose a patient to scleral show. These include eyelid laxity with or without atrophic orbicularis muscle tone, lax canthal tendons, hypoplastic malar eminences, unrecognized Graves’ ophthalmopathy, unilateral high myopia, or the secondary blepharoplasty. Suspension of the tarsus of the lower eyelid, concomitant with or following blepharoplasty, can straighten bowed lids and provide 2 to 3 mm of elevation, if desired. A classification of patients likely to develop scleral show is presented along with a revised technique of tarsal suspension.
AB - The bowed lower eyelid, with scleral show, is a common but untoward result following blepharoplasty with even minimal skin excision. A number of conditions, unrecognized preoperatively, can predispose a patient to scleral show. These include eyelid laxity with or without atrophic orbicularis muscle tone, lax canthal tendons, hypoplastic malar eminences, unrecognized Graves’ ophthalmopathy, unilateral high myopia, or the secondary blepharoplasty. Suspension of the tarsus of the lower eyelid, concomitant with or following blepharoplasty, can straighten bowed lids and provide 2 to 3 mm of elevation, if desired. A classification of patients likely to develop scleral show is presented along with a revised technique of tarsal suspension.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0023225871&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/00006534-198706000-00008
DO - 10.1097/00006534-198706000-00008
M3 - Article
C2 - 3588728
AN - SCOPUS:0023225871
SN - 0032-1052
VL - 79
SP - 897
EP - 905
JO - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
JF - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
IS - 6
ER -