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Ocular Prosthesis- Eye with an Art

Debasish De, Bachelor of Optometry

Optometrist, Dr. Shroff’s Charity Eye Hospital, New Delhi.

 

The face is the portrait of the mind, the eyes, its informers.

It is said that ‘eyes are the ‘windows to the soul. Loss or absence of any part of the face can cause severe physical and psychological trauma. (1) The eyes are the most noticeable structure on the face,(2) and their loss causes a psychological fragility of patients.(3) The absence of eye may be congenital (4) or acquired due to surgical removal which can be indicated in several cases such as traumas,(5) cancer, painful blind eye, and suprachoroidal haemorrhage etc.(6)

Depending on the severity, surgical management includes one of the three approaches: enucleation, evisceration, or exenteration.(7) There are several materials and techniques in the literature for the fabrication of ocular prosthesis. It may be using a stock eye, modifying stock eye, or fully customized ocular prosthesis.

Procedure

 

Figure1: Steps of taking impression with the mixture of Alginate powder. For preparing the impression into a wax model, the impression tray is dipped into a mixture of alginate powder and the carving wax is heated and poured into the impression to create a wax model then the alginate mixture is opened, and an exact wax replica of the socket impression is created. The wax model is then smoothened (Fig 2).

Figure 2: Preparation of wax model.

Figure. 3: Painted Iris button.

Figure 4: Wax model inserted into patient’s eye socket.

Figure 5: Preparation of mould.

Figure 6: Demonstrates the fabrication process.

 Figure 7: Polishing of the front and back surface of the prosthesis.

Figure 8: Colouring of sclera.

Figure 9: Application of clear coating with PMMA and monomer mixture.

 Figure10: Trimming & polishing process of the Prosthesis.

Figure 11: Final prosthesis polished and fitted.

Human eyes have highly complex structure which is difficult to mimic. COP’s has many advantages over stock eye like, better colour matching, more coordinated movements. Success of ocular prosthesis mainly depends on the precision, knowledge, and artistic skills of the clinician.

 

 References

  1. Cain JR. Custom ocular prosthetics. J Prosthet Dent 1982;48(6):
    690–694. DOI: 10.1016/S0022-3913(82)80030-9.
  2. Pathak C, Pawah S, Singh G, et al. Prosthetic rehabilitation of completely blind subject with bilateral customised ocular prosthesis: a case report. J Clin Diagn Res. 2017 Jan;11(1):ZD06–ZD08
  3. Zheng C, Wu AY. Enucleation versus evisceration in ocular trauma:a retrospective review and study of current literature. Orbit. 2013 Dec;32(6):356–361.
  4. Bermejo E, Martínez-Frías ML. Congenital eye malformations: clinical epidemiological analysis of 1,124,654 consecutive births in Spain. Am J Med Genet. 1998 Feb 17;75(5):497–504.
  5. Goiato MC, Mancuso DN, Sundefeld MLMM, et al. Aesthetic and functional ocular rehabilitation. Oral Oncology Extra. 2005;41 (8):162–164.
  6. Nakra T, Simon GJ, Douglas RS, et al. Comparing outcomes of enucleation and evisceration. Ophthalmology. 2006 Dec;113(12):2270–2275.
  7. Parr GR, Goldman BM, Rahn AO. Surgical considerations in the prosthetic treatment of ocular and orbital defects. J Prosthet Dent 1983;49(3):379–385. DOI: 10.1016/0022-3913(83)90281-0.

 

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