[Conjunctival sac of anophthalmic orbits].

Journal francais d'ophtalmologie 1982 Vol.5(11) p. 687-98

Rodallec A, Krastinova D

Abstract

Reconstruction of the conjunctival sac is never a simple procedure. It is a question of positioning a prosthesis in the orbital cavity which will have no anatomic support, as the eye has been enucleated, reduced to a stump (microphthalmos) or has been replaced by an implant that has just been expelled. All described techniques consist in enlarging the existing conjunctival sac, and then positioning a mucosal or dermo-epidermical graft in the orbital cavity maintained by a conformer. In order to limit the effects of the inevitable retraction during the first weeks following surgery, operative enlargement beyond the needs of the conjunctival sac is essential. The conformer should be supported by tarsorraphy until the phenomenon of retraction has reached an end (4 to 6 months). The problem of the "orbital cavity" must be understood so that indications for surgical remodelling of the conjunctival sac can be established. This is simple after enucleation, but more complex in the case of a microphthalmos, an injury, or an exenteration of the orbit where remodelling represents only the last operative stage after bone remodelling, or lids remodelling and sometimes transposition of the temporalis muscle in the socket.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 eye scispacy 1
해부 graft scispacy 1
해부 orbit scispacy 1
해부 bone scispacy 1
해부 temporalis muscle scispacy 1
합병증 conjunctival sac scispacy 1
합병증 socket scispacy 1
질환 microphthalmos C0026010
Microphthalmos
scispacy 1
질환 lids remodelling scispacy 1
질환 Conjunctival sac scispacy 1
기타 conjunctival sac scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Adult; Anophthalmos; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Conjunctiva; Eye, Artificial; Female; Humans; Male; Mouth Mucosa; Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures; Postoperative Complications; Skin Transplantation; Surgery, Plastic