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Orbital Fat (Adipose Tissue) and the Advantage of Youth
If there were advantages to losing an eye at an early age
one would highlight the child's ability to adapt to monocular
vision more readily than an adult's sudden loss of vision
and reconciling with the loss of depth perception.
Another advantage would be from the position of cosmesis.
When a child loses an eye, the orbital (adipose) fatty tissue
that cushions the eyeball remains fairly firm and will remain
in its orbital position for many years following removal
of the eye. Whereas, the adult can experience partial
loss of a less firm adipose tissue at the time of evisceration
or enucleation, or in later years due to absorption of the
orbital fat or gravitational displacement. This can
occur despite placement of a large orbital implant.
Retention of this orbital soft tissue is most important for
facial (cosmetic) symmetry as it relates specifically to
the upper eyelid.
This first case, despite being a traumatic (perforated globe)
injury shows the superior sulcus (the area between the eyebrow
and the lid margin) to remain symmetrically balanced over
a 27 year period. This was also significant since the
Iowa motility implant inserted with its rectus muscles imbricated
over the implant (overlapped and sewn together) at the time
of surgery, rotated 90 degrees within the first month and
gave the eye socket the appearance of a ball implant.
(Note: The Iowa implant's anterior surface had four well
pronounced nubbins that would offer an irregular contour
for the posterior surface of the prosthesis to conform to.
This would normally transfer excellent movement to the prosthesis.)
Figure 16A
This photo was taken immediately after the first prosthesis
was first fitted. Age 2½ years.
Figure 16B
As a first year college student there is still no anatomical
change in the adipose tissue in the superior sulcus.
Age 17 years.
Figure 16C
As a young career woman at the age of 29 years the only changes
required over the years were replacement prostheses as the
skull and bony orbital wall enlarged.
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