Frontalis suspension surgery to treat patients with essential blepharospasm and apraxia of eyelid opening-technique and results

2014 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Frontalis suspension surgery to treat patients with essential blepharospasm and apraxia of eyelid opening-technique and results​
Karapantzou, C.; Dressler, D.; Rohrbach, S. & Laskawi, R.​ (2014) 
Head & Face Medicine10 art. 44​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1746-160X-10-44 

Documents & Media

1746-160X-10-44.xml33.63 kBXML1746-160X-10-44.pdf1.61 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Authors
Karapantzou, Chrisanthi; Dressler, Dirk; Rohrbach, Saskia; Laskawi, Rainer
Abstract
Introduction: We describe the results of 15 patients suffering from essential blepharospasm with apraxia of eyelid opening who underwent frontalis suspension surgery. Material and methods: Patients with apraxia of eyelid opening and unresponsive to botulinum toxin injections were studied. Bilateral frontalis suspension surgery was performed (sling operation) using polytetrafluoroethylene (Gore-Tex (R)) sutures. The patients reported the degree of improvement using a subjective rating scale to evaluate the benefit of the operation at two times after surgery (0-10 days and 180-360 days). Results: The patients reported a high degree of subjective improvement. In the early postoperative period (0-10 days) the mean degree of subjective improvement was 74.6% (standard deviation (SD) 26.4%). At 180-360 days after surgery the mean improvement was 70.0% (SD 26.7%). Small hematomas of the upper lid occurred postoperatively in all patients. Other complications were suture extrusions (9.1%), suture granulomas (6.1%), lacrimation (5.0%) and local infections (7.5%). Postoperatively, all patients needed additional botulinum toxin injections for optimal outcome. Conclusion: Frontalis suspension surgery is a minimally invasive and effective treatment option for apraxia of eyelid opening in patients with essential blepharospasm unresponsive to botulinum toxin injections alone.
Issue Date
2014
Status
published
Publisher
Biomed Central Ltd
Journal
Head & Face Medicine 
ISSN
1746-160X

Reference

Citations


Social Media