Koka Kirthi, Patel Bhupendra C.
Sankara Nethralaya Chennai
University of Utah
The term “ptosis” is derived from the Greek word falling and refers to drooping of a body part. Blepharoptosis is upper eyelid drooping with the eyes in the primary position of gaze. The shape of one's eyes along with the position of the eyelids, shape, and position of the eyebrow determines one's identity. Hence, drooping of the eyelids may produce a functional or a cosmetic deficit. Ptosis can occur in all age groups and is the result of various factors. One must remember that when a patient presents with complaints of drooping, it is a mere symptom and not the diagnosis. A thorough evaluation is of utmost importance to determine the cause. Ptosis can classify as true ptosis or pseudoptosis. True ptosis is further classified based on the age of presentation into congenital ptosis and acquired ptosis. Acquired adult ptosis is further classified based upon the etiological factors as: 1. Aponeurotic ptosis. 2. Neurogenic ptosis. 3. Myogenic ptosis. 4. Mechanical ptosis. 5. Traumatic ptosis. Aponeurotic ptosis is the most prevalent form of adult ptosis and usually presents in the 5th or 6th decade of life. It is also known as involutional ptosis. However, it can occur in young individuals following trauma, recent eyelid swelling, ocular surgery or prolonged use of contact lenses. The pathogenesis of aponeurotic ptosis is most often due to dehiscence or disinsertion of the levator aponeurosis. In involutional cases, true dehiscence is sometimes absent, and ptosis occurs due to stretching or thinning of the aponeurosis. Rarely the levator muscle shows fatty infiltration. Characteristic features of this type of ptosis are that patients have a good levator function with a high lid crease, affected eyelid appears lower on down gaze and a thin upper eyelid with redundant skin. Neurogenic ptosis results from any condition which disrupts the innervation of either the levator muscle or muller’s muscle. The varieties most commonly encountered by an ophthalmologist are 3rd cranial nerve palsy and Horner syndrome. Lesions along the oculomotor nerve present with ptosis and restriction of adduction, elevation and depression movements of the eyeball. Pupillary involvement may or may not be present. Bell's phenomenon is usually poor. Pupil-involving third nerve palsy is considered a neurological as it is most often due to a posterior communicating artery aneurysm compressing the nerve. Pupil-sparing third nerve palsy is most often due to an ischemic vascular cause and usually resolves spontaneously in 3 months. Other causes include inflammation, trauma or tumors along the course of the nerve. Lesions of the superior orbital fissure, orbital apex, or cavernous sinus, present in combination with other cranial nerve palsies. Treatment is challenging as the patients have a poor or absent Bell’s phenomenon placing them at high risk of developing exposure keratopathy post-surgery. Ideally, strabismus surgery is done first to correct the deviation followed by ptosis correction via the frontalis sling technique with planned under-correction. Horner syndrome consists of mild ptosis, pupillary miosis, apparent enophthalmos, and anhidrosis. It occurs due to interruption of the sympathetic nerve supply to the muller’s muscle and dilator pupillae muscle. Pupillary anisocoria can be well demonstrated in dim illumination. Patients with Horner’s syndrome occurring during childhood also have iris heterochromia due to decreased melanin production in melanocytes which is controlled by the sympathetic pathway. The diagnosis of Horner syndrome is often made clinically. Pharmacological tests using 4% cocaine, 1% hydroxyamphetamine or 2.5% phenylephrine help confirm the diagnosis. Myogenic ptosis arises due to an abnormality in the levator muscle itself. These patients usually present with reduced levator action along with restricted extraocular motility and facial expression. Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disorder characterized by the presence of antibodies to acetylcholine receptors located at the neuromuscular endplates of voluntary muscles. This leads to decreased action of acetylcholine which results in muscle weakness and fatigue. Myasthenia may be generalized or localized to the eye (ocular myasthenia). The most common presenting feature is variable ptosis associated with diplopia. Symptoms may be unilateral or bilateral. Patients with myasthenia initially have a good levator function. Prolonged upgaze will cause a worsening of ptosis in these patients due to muscle fatigue. Cogan lid twitch sign: Rapid saccadic eye movements from downgaze to primary position results in rapid upshoot of the lid followed by a gradual drop to the primary position. Other tests which help confirm the diagnosis include ice test, serum acetylcholine receptor antibody assay, single fiber electromyography, and repetitive nerve stimulation test. Treatment of such patients involves administration of acetylcholinesterase drugs, oral steroids or immunosuppressants. In patients with severe ptosis, ptosis correction with planned under-correction may be an option. Myotonic dystrophy is an autosomal dominant disorder which presents with gradually progressing ptosis and external ophthalmoplegia. The pathologic process is a failure of muscle to relax after contraction. It also involves muscles of facial expression, neck, and limbs. Ocular examination in these patients also shows pupillary light-near dissociation, chromatic cataracts (Christmas tree cataract), and retinal pigmentary degeneration. Males develop a frontal pattern of balding and testicular atrophy. CPEO is a mitochondrial myopathy causing bilateral symmetrical involvement of the extraocular muscles. Manifestations begin in childhood or adolescent age and progress slowly during adulthood. Bilateral symmetrical involvement is the first symptom followed by bilateral ophthalmoplegia. Due to the symmetric involvement of extraocular muscles, patients often do not complain of diplopia. As the muscles of facial expression are involved, patients develop an expressionless face (Hutchinson's face) Diagnosis is confirmed by muscle biopsy which shows ragged red fibers due to enlarged mitochondria. Kearns-Sayre syndrome: A variant of CPEO which shows retinal pigmentary degeneration, cardiac conduction defects, complete heart block, ataxia, neuropathy, endocrine dysfunction, and occurs in young adults. There is no treatment to date for CPEO. Ptosis surgery to clear the visual axis can be done in severe cases keeping in mind the high risk of exposure keratopathy. This autosomal dominant disorder manifests in the 4 to 5 decade of life with bilateral ptosis, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, dysphagia, dysarthria, facial muscle weakness, and proximal limb weakness. Ptosis secondary to any tumor producing an increased weight on the lids, cicatrization or scarring of the conjunctiva, and blepharochalasis. Ptosis occurs due to direct or indirect trauma to the levator muscle. Penetrating injuries involving the levator can be repaired immediately. However, ptosis secondary to blunt trauma may resolve spontaneously over time. Ptosis which does not improve after 6 months can have surgical repair. It is not true ptosis but apparent ptosis due to abnormalities in structures other than the levator muscle. Causes include dermatochalasis, brow ptosis, hypotropia, microphthalmos, anophthalmos, phthisis bulbi, and contralateral eyelid retraction. It is very important to distinguish true ptosis from a pseudoptosis before embarking upon any surgical correction for drooping. Patients usually complain of: 1. Drooping of eyelids. 2. Feeling of heaviness in the eyes. 3. Visual obscuration due to drooping. 4. Cosmetic complaints. A thorough history taking and clinical examination help determine the etiology of ptosis and plan appropriate treatment. History taking should include the age of onset of ptosis, progression, duration, and any aggravating or relieving factors. Any associated symptoms such as diplopia, diurnal variation, pain, lid swelling, dysphagia or muscle weakness help provide a provisional diagnosis. Predisposing factors such as trauma, ocular or eyelid surgery, contact lens use, and botulinum toxin injection should be carefully ruled out. A family history of ptosis should be looked for to rule out hereditary disorders. In patients where the history is inconclusive, assessment of old photographs gives an idea about the time of onset. Any systemic illness, mental health issues, and medication history require documentation. Patients on blood thinners such as aspirin should be advised to stop medications 1 week before surgery. Clinical examination starts from the moment the patient walks into the doctor's clinic. It is essential to look for any facial asymmetry, frontalis overaction, chin up or head tilt posture. 1. Visual acuity and refraction. 2. Cover test to look for any hypotropia and rule out any component of pseudoptosis. 3. Extraocular motility disturbance and any aberrant eyelid movements. 4. Pupillary examination to look for Horner syndrome or 3rd cranial nerve palsy. 5. Examination to look for any giant papillary conjunctivitis or symblepharon. 6. Corneal sensation and dry eye evaluation as they can predispose to post-operative keratopathy. 7. Fundus examination for features of retinal pigmentary degeneration. Lid measurements should be done positioning the face in the frontal plane, negating the action of frontalis muscle with the thumb, and eyes in the primary position of gaze. The examiner should be seated at the eye level of the patient to avoid parallax error. 1. Palpebral fissure height (PFH): It is the vertical palpebral aperture height between the upper and lower eyelid margin in the pupillary plane with eyes in the primary position of gaze. Average PFH is around 10mm. 2. Marginal reflex distance 1 (MRD 1): MRD 1 is the distance between the upper lid margin and the corneal light reflex. Normal MRD 1 is 4-5mm. The difference in MRD 1 between the two eyes helps classify ptosis as mild, moderate or severe in patients presenting with unilateral ptosis. The difference in MRD 1 between two eyes: 2mm – Mild ptosis. 3mm – Moderate ptosis. 4mm – Severe ptosis . 3. Marginal reflex distance 2 (MRD 2): MRD 2 is the distance between the corneal light reflex and lower eyelid margin. Normally MRD 1 + MRD 2 = PFH. 4. Levator action: It is the amount of excursion measured with a millimeter scale when the eyelid moves from extreme downgaze to extreme upgaze with frontalis action negated. Normal levator action is greater than 15mm. It is the single most important measurement in a patient with ptosis as its value determines the choice of surgical procedure. Grading of levator action: Less than 4 mm – Poor. 5 to 9 mm – Fair. 9 to 11 mm – Good. Greater than 12 mm – Excellent. In patients with poor levator action (less than 4mm), frontalis sling surgery is the preferred procedure. 5. Margin crease distance (MCD): It is the distance between the lid margin and skin crease in downgaze. Normal MCD is 7 to 8mm in men and 8 to 10 mm in women. In congenital ptosis, MCD is usually absent or faint, whereas in aponeurotic ptosis MCD is higher than normal. During surgery, it is very important to reform the crease identical to the contralateral eye to maintain symmetry and achieve good cosmesis. 6. Bell’s phenomenon: This is another very important factor to be considered before ptosis correction. The patient is asked to close the eyes gently, and an attempt is made to open them. In patients with poor bell’s, ptosis correction should be avoided or undercorrected to avoid the risk of post-operative exposure keratopathy. 7. Assess presence of lagophthalmos and lid lag on downgaze which if present will worsen post-surgery. 8. Any brow ptosis or dermatochalasis if present should be documented. In involutional ptosis, blepharoplasty procedure is often combined with ptosis repair. 9. Hering test: In patients with unilateral ptosis, the ptotic lid is gently elevated manually, and the contralateral eyelid observed. Due to Hering's law of equal innervation, the contralateral eyelid may drop (See-saw effect). It is important to demonstrate this to the patient preoperatively and warn them about the possibility of requiring ptosis surgery in the contralateral eye. In such cases, a planned under-correction may be the treatment. 10. Phenylephrine test: It is a useful test in patients with mild ptosis or ptosis due to Horner syndrome; instill 2.5% phenylephrine drops in the superior fornix. Ptosis measurements are repeated after 10 minutes. Patients in whom the ptotic lid elevates due to stimulation of Muller's muscle are ideal candidates for posterior approach ptosis correction (conjunctival – mullerectomy surgery). 11. Tests to rule out myasthenia gravis: Fatigue test: The patient maintains fixation in upgaze for 30 seconds. In patients with myasthenia, the eyelid gradually drops down due to muscle fatigue. Ice test: An ice pack is placed over the closed ptotic eyelid for 2 minutes. Ptotic measurements are repeated after 2 minutes. Improvement in PFH by 2mm or more is considered positive for myasthenia. This is because cooling improves neuromuscular transmission. 12. Hertel exophthalmometry: A Hertel reading helps rule out any proptosis or enophthalmos and thus excludes pseudoptosis.
“上睑下垂”一词源于希腊语“falling”,指身体部位下垂。睑下垂是指在眼睛处于初始注视位置时上睑下垂。眼睛的形状以及眼睑的位置、形状和眉毛的位置决定了一个人的容貌特征。因此,眼睑下垂可能会导致功能或美容缺陷。上睑下垂可发生于所有年龄组,由多种因素引起。必须记住,当患者诉说有下垂症状时,这仅仅是一种症状,而非诊断结果。进行全面评估对于确定病因至关重要。上睑下垂可分为真性上睑下垂和假性上睑下垂。真性上睑下垂根据发病年龄进一步分为先天性上睑下垂和后天性上睑下垂。后天性成人上睑下垂根据病因进一步分类为:1. 腱膜性上睑下垂。2. 神经源性上睑下垂。3. 肌源性上睑下垂。4. 机械性上睑下垂。5. 外伤性上睑下垂。腱膜性上睑下垂是成人上睑下垂最常见的形式,通常出现在50或60岁。它也被称为退行性上睑下垂。然而,在年轻人中,外伤、近期眼睑肿胀、眼部手术或长期使用隐形眼镜后也可能发生。腱膜性上睑下垂的发病机制最常见的是提上睑肌腱膜裂开或脱离。在退行性病例中,有时没有真正的裂开,上睑下垂是由于腱膜伸展或变薄所致。很少见提上睑肌出现脂肪浸润。这种类型上睑下垂的特征是患者提上睑肌功能良好,睑裂高,患侧眼睑在向下注视时显得更低,上睑薄且皮肤松弛。神经源性上睑下垂是由任何破坏提上睑肌或米勒肌神经支配的情况引起的。眼科医生最常遇到的类型是动眼神经麻痹和霍纳综合征。动眼神经沿线的病变表现为上睑下垂以及眼球内收、上抬和下压运动受限。瞳孔可能受累也可能不受累。贝尔现象通常较差。累及瞳孔的动眼神经麻痹被认为是神经性的,因为它最常由于后交通动脉瘤压迫神经所致。瞳孔未受累的动眼神经麻痹最常由于缺血性血管原因引起,通常在3个月内自行缓解。其他原因包括神经沿线的炎症、外伤或肿瘤。眶上裂、眶尖或海绵窦的病变常与其他颅神经麻痹同时出现。治疗具有挑战性,因为患者贝尔现象较差或无贝尔现象,这使他们在手术后发生暴露性角膜炎的风险很高。理想情况下,首先进行斜视手术以纠正斜视,然后通过额肌悬吊技术进行上睑下垂矫正,并计划进行欠矫。霍纳综合征包括轻度上睑下垂、瞳孔缩小、眼球内陷和无汗。它是由于供应米勒肌和瞳孔开大肌的交感神经中断所致。在暗光下可很好地显示瞳孔不等大。儿童期发生霍纳综合征的患者也有虹膜异色,这是由于受交感神经通路控制的黑素细胞中黑色素生成减少所致。霍纳综合征的诊断通常通过临床做出。使用4%可卡因、1%羟苯丙胺或2.5%去氧肾上腺素的药理学测试有助于确诊。肌源性上睑下垂是由于提上睑肌本身异常引起的。这些患者通常表现为提上睑肌作用减弱,同时伴有眼球外肌运动受限和面部表情受限。重症肌无力是一种自身免疫性疾病,其特征是在随意肌的神经肌肉终板处存在抗乙酰胆碱受体抗体。这导致乙酰胆碱作用减弱,从而导致肌肉无力和疲劳。重症肌无力可能是全身性的,也可能局限于眼部(眼肌型重症肌无力)。最常见的表现是与复视相关的可变上睑下垂。症状可能是单侧或双侧的。重症肌无力患者最初提上睑肌功能良好。长时间向上注视会导致这些患者由于肌肉疲劳而上睑下垂加重。科根眼睑抽搐征:从向下注视快速扫视到初始位置会导致眼睑快速上抬,随后逐渐下降到初始位置。其他有助于确诊的检查包括冰试验、血清乙酰胆碱受体抗体测定、单纤维肌电图和重复神经刺激试验。此类患者的治疗包括给予乙酰胆碱酯酶药物、口服类固醇或免疫抑制剂。对于严重上睑下垂的患者,计划进行欠矫的上睑下垂矫正可能是一种选择。强直性肌营养不良是一种常染色体显性疾病,表现为逐渐进展的上睑下垂和眼球外肌麻痹。病理过程是肌肉收缩后不能放松。它还累及面部表情肌、颈部和四肢肌肉。这些患者的眼部检查还显示瞳孔光近反射分离、彩色白内障(圣诞树白内障)和视网膜色素变性。男性会出现额部秃发和睾丸萎缩。慢性进行性眼外肌麻痹是一种线粒体肌病,导致眼球外肌双侧对称受累。症状始于儿童期或青少年期,在成年期缓慢进展。双侧对称受累是首发症状,随后是双侧眼球外肌麻痹。由于眼球外肌对称受累,患者通常不会诉说复视。由于面部表情肌受累,患者会出现表情淡漠的面容(哈钦森面容)。通过肌肉活检确诊,活检显示由于线粒体增大而出现破碎红纤维。卡恩斯 - 塞尔综合征:慢性进行性眼外肌麻痹的一种变异型,表现为视网膜色素变性、心脏传导缺陷、完全性心脏传导阻滞、共济失调、神经病变、内分泌功能障碍,发生于年轻人。目前慢性进行性眼外肌麻痹尚无治疗方法。在严重情况下,可以进行上睑下垂手术以清除视轴,但要牢记发生暴露性角膜炎的高风险。这种常染色体显性疾病在40至50岁时出现双侧上睑下垂、进行性眼球外肌麻痹、吞咽困难、构音障碍、面部肌肉无力和近端肢体无力。任何导致眼睑重量增加、结膜瘢痕化或睑皮松弛症的肿瘤均可继发上睑下垂。上睑下垂是由于提上睑肌直接或间接外伤引起的。涉及提上睑肌的穿透伤可立即修复。然而,钝挫伤继发的上睑下垂可能会随着时间自行缓解。6个月后仍未改善的上睑下垂可进行手术修复。这不是真正的上睑下垂,而是由于提上睑肌以外的结构异常导致的假性上睑下垂。原因包括皮肤松弛症、眉下垂、下斜视、小眼球、无眼球、眼球痨和对侧眼睑退缩。在对下垂进行任何手术矫正之前,将真性上睑下垂与假性上睑下垂区分开来非常重要。患者通常会诉说:1. 眼睑下垂。2. 眼睛沉重感。3. 由于下垂导致的视力遮挡。4. 美容方面的问题。全面的病史采集和临床检查有助于确定上睑下垂的病因并制定适当的治疗方案。病史采集应包括上睑下垂的发病年龄、进展情况、持续时间以及任何加重或缓解因素。任何相关症状,如复视、日间变化、疼痛、眼睑肿胀、吞咽困难或肌肉无力,有助于做出初步诊断。应仔细排除诱发因素。如外伤、眼部或眼睑手术、使用隐形眼镜和注射肉毒杆菌毒素。应寻找上睑下垂的家族史以排除遗传性疾病。对于病史不明确的患者,评估旧照片可以了解发病时间。任何全身性疾病、心理健康问题和用药史都需要记录。正在服用血液稀释剂(如阿司匹林)的患者应在手术前1周停药。临床检查从患者走进医生诊所的那一刻就开始了。必须寻找任何面部不对称、额肌过度活动、下巴上抬或头部倾斜姿势。1. 视力和验光。2. 遮盖试验以寻找任何下斜视并排除假性上睑下垂的任何成分。3. 眼球外肌运动障碍和任何异常的眼睑运动。4. 瞳孔检查以寻找霍纳综合征或动眼神经麻痹。5. 检查以寻找任何巨大乳头性结膜炎或睑球粘连。6. 角膜感觉和干眼评估,因为它们可能易导致术后角膜病变。7. 眼底检查以寻找视网膜色素变性的特征。眼睑测量应在面部处于额平面、用拇指抵消额肌作用且眼睛处于初始注视位置时进行。检查者应坐在患者眼睛水平高度以避免视差误差。1. 睑裂高度(PFH):它是在瞳孔平面中,眼睛处于初始注视位置时上睑缘与下睑缘之间的垂直睑裂孔径高度。平均PFH约为10mm。2. 边缘反射距离1(MRD 1):MRD 1是上睑缘与角膜光反射之间的距离。正常MRD 1为4 - 5mm。单侧上睑下垂患者两眼之间MRD 1的差异有助于将上睑下垂分为轻度、中度或重度。两眼之间MRD 1的差异:2mm - 轻度上睑下垂。3mm - 中度上睑下垂。4mm - 重度上睑下垂。3. 边缘反射距离2(MRD 2):MRD 2是角膜光反射与下睑缘之间的距离。通常MRD 1 + MRD 2 = PFH。4. 提上睑肌作用:它是在抵消额肌作用的情况下,当眼睑从极度向下注视移动到极度向上注视时,用毫米尺测量的移动量。正常提上睑肌作用大于15mm。这是上睑下垂患者最重要的一项测量,因为其值决定了手术方法的选择。提上睑肌作用分级:小于4mm - 差。5至9mm - 尚可。9至11mm - 良好。大于12mm - 优秀。提上睑肌作用差(小于4mm)的患者,额肌悬吊手术是首选方法。5. 睑缘皱襞距离(MCD):它是在向下注视时睑缘与皮肤皱襞之间的距离。男性正常MCD为7至8mm,女性为8至10mm。在先天性上睑下垂中,MCD通常不存在或模糊不清,而在腱膜性上睑下垂中,MCD高于正常。在手术过程中,非常重要的是形成与对侧眼睛相同的皱襞以保持对称并实现良好的美容效果。6. 贝尔现象:这是上睑下垂矫正前要考虑的另一个非常重要的因素。要求患者轻轻闭眼,然后尝试睁开眼睛。贝尔现象差的患者,应避免进行上睑下垂矫正或进行欠矫,以避免术后暴露性角膜炎的风险。7. 评估有无睑裂闭合不全和向下注视时的眼睑滞后,若存在,术后情况会恶化。8. 如有眉下垂或皮肤松弛症应记录。在退行性上睑下垂中,眼睑成形术通常与上睑下垂修复术联合进行。9. 赫林试验:对于单侧上睑下垂患者,手动轻轻抬起下垂的眼睑,观察对侧眼睑。由于赫林等神经支配定律,对侧眼睑可能会下垂(跷跷板效应)。术前向患者展示这一现象并警告他们对侧眼睛可能需要进行上睑下垂手术非常重要。在这种情况下,计划进行欠矫可能是治疗方法。10. 去氧肾上腺素试验:对于轻度上睑下垂或霍纳综合征导致的上睑下垂患者是一项有用的试验;在上穹窿滴入2.5%去氧肾上腺素滴眼液。10分钟后重复测量上睑下垂情况。由于米勒肌受刺激而上垂眼睑抬起的患者是后入路上睑下垂矫正术(结膜 - 米勒肌切除术)的理想候选人。11. 排除重症肌无力的试验:疲劳试验:患者向上注视保持固定30秒。重症肌无力患者,眼睑会由于肌肉疲劳逐渐下垂。冰试验:将冰袋放在闭合的下垂眼睑上2分钟。2分钟后重复测量上睑下垂情况。PFH改善2mm或更多被认为是重症肌无力阳性。这是因为冷却可改善神经肌肉传递。12. 赫特尔眼球突出计测量:赫特尔读数有助于排除任何眼球突出或眼球内陷,从而排除假性上睑下垂。