Sagging eye syndrome surgery

Reviewed by Fiona Rowe

This retrospective study evaluated outcomes of surgery for patients with sagging eye syndrome (SES) from 1994 to 2014, to determine recurrence rates of strabismus. The study identified 103 cases; 93 requiring surgery for symptomatic small angle strabismus and 10 requiring prisms. The surgery group included 40 males and 53 females with a mean age of 68±12 years. Mean distance angle was 4.2±7.5PD esotropia and 4.7±5.9PD hypertropia. Eighty-four cases used prisms prior to surgery. Diplopia was present preoperatively for a mean of 1602±223 days. Recurrence was noted in 19 cases. The authors propose recurrence of postoperative diplopia was due to progression of the age-related dehiscence of orbital connective tissue rather than surgical over or under correction and conclude that strabismus surgery provides long-term relief of diplopia for the majority of such patients.

Long-term surgical outcomes in the sagging eye syndrome.
Chaudhuri Z, Demer JL.
STRABISMUS
2018;26(1):6-10.
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