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Welcome to this portion of our web site if you have just
been directed here by one of the web search engines.
This pictorial segment of our informational web site should
be of interest to all prospective wearers of a plastic artificial
eye prosthesis, especially if their eye is to be (or was)
surgically removed, or if their eye is dysfunctional and
unsightly. In either instance, the search is for restoration
of facial symmetry. An old adage still cited is that
"a picture is worth 10,000 words." This quotation may
be true for land and seascapes, where ones imagination is
put to use, but, when aberrant changes that affect the human
eye and its surrounding anatomical structure a simple display
of 'before and after' photographs requires more of an explanation.
In the following case presentations we will provide a diagnosis
or history of the patient, and offer other pertinent information
relating to the type of prosthesis that was fabricated and
fitted. This will be a composite of case results from
our pediatric to geriatric patient files covering a range
of orbital and eyelid conditions.
Our ambition is to show some of the results from several
of our
published articles relating to congenital anomalies such
as the lack of an eyeball at birth and various stages of
partially developed globes and underdeveloped eyelids.
In addition to this, there will be a series of pictures of
patients who had acquired impairments following trauma, systemic
disease and/or post-operative procedures that affected normally
developed eyes. This will include cases with diagnoses
such as blind, scarred, disfigured globes requiring various
types of scleral cover shell prostheses. Other conclusions
will show results following enucleation (removal of the eye),
evisceration (removal of the contents of the eye), exenteration
(radical removal of the orbital contents which could include
the eyelids) and severe injuries involving partial loss of
the eyelids.
The following excerpts are referenced from past continuing
educational courses we have presented at American
Society of Ocularists meetings; and authored articles
from the featured cover story for the Journal of the American
Optometric Association of June 1998, entitled "Essentials
in Fitting Ocular Prostheses for Complex Congenital and Acquired
Anomalies", and from an extensive chapter relating to
"The
Role of the Ocularist" in Michael E. Migliori, M.D.,
F.A.C.S. edited ophthalmic book entitled "Enucleation, Evisceration
and Exenteration of the Eye". Published by Butterworth-Heinemann
in 1999.
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