Deep lateral wall orbital decompression following strabismus surgery in patients with Type II ophthalmic Graves’ disease
2018
ABSTRACTPurpose: Surgical management of ophthalmic Graves’ disease traditionally involves, in order, orbital decompression, followed by strabismus surgery and eyelid surgery. Nunery et al. previously described two distinct sub-types of patients with ophthalmic Graves’ disease; Type I patients exhibit no restrictive myopathy (no diplopia) as opposed to Type II patients who do exhibit restrictive myopathy (diplopia) and are far more likely to develop new-onset worsening diplopia following medial wall and floor decompression. Strabismus surgery involving extra-ocular muscle recession has, in turn, been shown to potentially worsen proptosis. Our experience with Type II patients who have already undergone medial wall and floor decompression and strabismus surgery found, when additional decompression is necessary, deep lateral wall decompression (DLWD) appears to have a low rate of post-operative primary-gaze diplopia.Methods: A case series of four Type II ophthalmic Graves’ disease patients, all of whom had al...
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
7
References
1
Citations
NaN
KQI