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Surgical management of the orbit in thyroid eye disease: lateral orbital decompression

Authors :
Jonathan S. Williams
Priya D. Sahu
Source :
Current opinion in otolaryngologyhead and neck surgery. 29(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW Lateral orbital wall decompression is one of many well established techniques available to surgeons in management of patients with clinically significant thyroid eye disease (TED). Several different surgical approaches have been described in the literature and are reviewed herein. RECENT FINDINGS Lateral orbital wall decompression remains a popular technique for surgical management of TED, with a recent American Society of Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery survey showing that 22.6% of respondents preferred a single-wall procedure, with 36.8% of that subset preferring lateral wall decompression alone. Surgical techniques for lateral orbital wall decompression differ based on several steps, such as the incisional approach, whether to take an ab-interno versus ab-externo approach, and whether to remove orbital fat to achieve further decompression. In addition, technological advances have produced an array of tools available to the orbital surgeon to achieve efficient and accurate bone removal. SUMMARY Lateral orbital wall decompression for TED, despite being an older technique, remains a popular and well established procedure for orbital decompression. Though no randomized controlled clinical trial supports one decompression technique over another for TED, lateral orbital wall decompression offers many benefits such as its ease of access and visualization of the orbital space.

Details

ISSN :
15316998
Volume :
29
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current opinion in otolaryngologyhead and neck surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e8d3cbd202618e5ebd9a5f2bcb2fdf3