Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2015)

Minimally invasive surgery for thyroid eye disease

  • Milind Neilkant Naik,
  • Akshay Gopinathan Nair,
  • Adit Gupta,
  • Saurabh Kamal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0301-4738.171967
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63, no. 11
pp. 847 – 853

Abstract

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Thyroid eye disease (TED) can affect the eye in myriad ways: proptosis, strabismus, eyelid retraction, optic neuropathy, soft tissue changes around the eye and an unstable ocular surface. TED consists of two phases: active, and inactive. The active phase of TED is limited to a period of 12-18 months and is mainly managed medically with immunosuppression. The residual structural changes due to the resultant fibrosis are usually addressed with surgery, the mainstay of which is orbital decompression. These surgeries are performed during the inactive phase. The surgical rehabilitation of TED has evolved over the years: not only the surgical techniques, but also the concepts, and the surgical tools available. The indications for decompression surgery have also expanded in the recent past. This article discusses the technological and conceptual advances of minimally invasive surgery for TED that decrease complications and speed up recovery. Current surgical techniques offer predictable, consistent results with better esthetics.

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