Abstract

To compare the facial features of patients with sagging eye syndrome (SES) and other ophthalmic diseases, and to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of facial features for SES. Retrospective cross-section study. We evaluated frontal facial photographs of patients >60 years of age with SES and intermittent exotropia (IXT), and control patients who visited the ophthalmology outpatient clinics of 2 institutions between June 2020 and December 2021. Three ophthalmologists evaluated each eye for sunken upper eyelid, blepharoptosis, and baggy lower eyelid, using a scoring scale. The average scores for each parameter among the 3 groups were analyzed. Patients with glaucoma, visual acuity <16/20, SES with a vertical strabismus angle of ≥6 Δ, IXT that could not be maintained in the phoria position during photography, a history of previous oculoplastic or ophthalmic surgery, and use prostaglandin analogs for cosmetic purposes were excluded. A total of 86 patients were included: 23 with SES, 28 with IXT, and 35 in the control group. All were Japanese. In all, 45 patients were male and 41 were female. The mean age was 72.7 ± 7.4 years. The sunken upper eyelid scores were significantly higher in the SES group than in the control and IXT groups (P < .001), whereas the baggy lower eyelid scores were significantly higher in the IXT group than in the control group (P < .05). Age-related orbital connective tissue degeneration may manifest as SES in the upper eyelid and as IXT in the lower eyelid.

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