Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate the effects of chalazion excision on the ocular surface, taking into account the subjective symptoms and the objective parameters of the tear film. MethodsThis prospective, interventional clinical study included 52 eyes from 26 patients with eyelid chalazion who underwent excision of the lesions between March and August 2022. Chalazion excision was performed on the patient's chalazion eye, and the contralateral eye served as the control. The following parameters were investigated both preoperatively and 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months postoperatively: the Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI), Schirmer I test, corneal fluorescein stain (CFS), tear meniscus height (TMH), noninvasive first breakup time (NifBUT), noninvasive average breakup time (NiaBUT), bulbar conjunctival redness score, the thickness of the lipid layer, and meibomian gland loss. ResultsBefore surgery, the OSDI score of the chalazion eye was significantly higher than the contralateral eye. The bulbar conjunctival redness score (p = 0.043) and the OSDI score (p = 0.004) improved significantly in the first month after surgery. In the third month after surgery, the objective parameters showed significant improvements, including TMH (p = 0.032), NiaBUT (p = 0.028), bulbar conjunctival redness score (p < 0.001), the thickness of the lipid layer (p = 0.021), and meibomian gland loss (p = 0.005). ConclusionsOur study revealed that chalazion excision can significantly improve the subjective symptoms and the objective tear film parameters of the ocular surface.

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