Extrusion rate of silicone spherical anophthalmic socket implants.

Ophthalmic plastic and reconstructive surgery 1993 Vol.9(2) p. 90-5

Nunery WR, Cepela MA, Heinz GW, Zale D, Martin RT

Abstract

The most popular technique of placement of an anophthalmic spherical implant was first described by Frost and Lange in 1886, and has remained essentially unchanged since that time. That technique incorporates imbrication of recti muscles over an 18 mm spherical implant, and purse stringing of conjunctiva and Tenon's fascia in a single layered closure. The Frost-Lange technique has led to previously reported extrusion rates as high as 11.3%. The technique is also associated with superotemporal implant migration and poor prosthetic motility. Our technique modification includes suturing recti muscles independently to a 20 mm spherical implant reinforced with autogenous fascia or preserved sclera. We then close Tenon's fascia and conjunctiva independently as separate layers. The extrusion rate for our patients during a 10 year study period was 0.84% (1 of 119). We found no implant migration, no painful socket, and prosthetic motility was good. We recommend our technique modification to replace the traditional Frost-Lange technique.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 anophthalmic scispacy 1
해부 recti muscles scispacy 1
해부 conjunctiva scispacy 1
해부 Tenon scispacy 1
해부 fascia scispacy 1
해부 superotemporal scispacy 1
해부 sclera scispacy 1
해부 socket scispacy 1
합병증 anophthalmic socket scispacy 1
약물 silicone C0037114
silicones
scispacy 1
약물 Frost-Lange scispacy 1
기타 autogenous fascia scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Eye Diseases; Eye Enucleation; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Orbit; Prostheses and Implants; Prosthesis Failure; Silicone Elastomers; Surgery, Plastic