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Eyelid Surgery(Blepharoplasty)
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Eyelid surgery (technically called blepharoplasty) is a
procedure to remove fat--usually along with excess skin
and muscle from the upper and lower eyelids. Eyelid
surgery can correct drooping upper lids and puffy bags
below your eyes - features that make you look older and
more tired than you feel, and may even interfere with
your vision. However, it won't remove crow's feet or
other wrinkles, eliminate dark circles under your eyes,
or lift sagging eyebrows. While it can add an upper
eyelid crease to Asian eyes, it will not erase evidence
of your ethnic or racial heritage. Blepharoplasty can be
done alone, or in conjunction with other facial surgery
procedures such as a facelift or browlift.
Blepharoplasty can enhance your appearance and your
self-confidence, but it won't necessarily change your
looks to match your ideal, or cause other people to
treat you differently. Before you decide to have
surgery, think carefully about your expectations and
discuss them with your surgeon.
The best candidates for eyelid surgery are men and women
who are physically healthy, psychologically stable, and
realistic in their expectations. Most are 35 or older,
but if droopy, baggy eyelids run in your family, you may
decide to have eyelid surgery at a younger age.
A few medical conditions make blepharoplasty more risky.
They include thyroid problems such as hypothyroidism and
Graves' disease, dry eye or lack of sufficient tears,
high blood pressure or other circulatory disorders,
cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. A detached retina
or glaucoma is also reason for caution; check with your
ophthalmologist before you have surgery.
The initial consultation with your surgeon is very
important. The surgeon will need your complete medical
history, so check your own records ahead of time and be
ready to provide this information. Be sure to inform
your surgeon if you have any allergies; if you're taking
any vitamins, medications (prescription or
over-the-counter), or other drugs; and if you smoke.
Blepharoplasty usually takes one to three hours,
depending on the extent of the surgery. If you're having
all four eyelids done, the surgeon will probably work on
the upper lids first, then the lower ones.
In a typical procedure, the surgeon makes incisions
following the natural lines of your eyelids; in the
creases of your upper lids, and just below the lashes in
the lower lids. The incisions may extend into the crow's
feet or laugh lines at the outer corners of your eyes.
Working through these incisions, the surgeon separates
the skin from underlying fatty tissue and muscle,
removes excess fat, and often trims sagging skin and
muscle. The incisions are then closed with very fine
sutures.
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