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  • Title
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Surgical Approach
  • 3. Pentagonal Incisions to Extend Vertical Aspect of Wound Beyond Tarsus
  • 4. Full-Thickness Excision to Prepare Wound for Closure
  • 5. Wound Closure with Mersilene Sutures
  • 6. Skin and Orbicularis Muscle Closure Vertically with Running Plain Gut Suture
  • 7. Post-op Remarks
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Lower Eyelid Full-Thickness Lid Margin Repair for 8-mm Defect Following Mohs Surgery for Basal Cell Carcinoma

John Lee, MD
Boston Vision

Transcription

CHAPTER 1

Hi, I'm John Lee, the oculoplastic surgeon at Boston Vision. You're gonna see me perform a lower eyelid, full-thickness lid margin repair. In this case, the patient had a Mohs excision for a basal cell carcinoma, leaving him with a sizable lower eyelid defect. And we're gonna close that with full-thickness margin repair. A full-thickness margin repair is a very common way to repair Moh's excisions. In this case, it was approximately an eight-millimeter full-thickness lower eyelid defect. Tarsus was reapproximated without having to resort to a lower eyelid lengthening procedure, such as a Tenzel flap.

CHAPTER 2

So we have here a full-thickness lower eyelid defect. This is a result of a Mohs excision for basal cell carcinoma of the lower eyelid. He underwent one round of Mohs, and had clear margins, and ended up with this lower lid defect, which we're gonna close today. So things I've noticed, full-thickness, you can see all the way to the globe, through the lid, meaning the conjunctiva, tarsus, orbicularis, and skin all involved. So we're going to attempt to just pull the lower edges together. I've made a vertical mark extending from the incision down to below where the tarsus would be. And I've connected these vertical lines in a pentagonal shape so that the edges will close better. These black marks are chars from the cautery during the Mohs excision. If I'm unable to get these two edges opposed, I have prepped and numbed an area on the lateral temple, which we can use as a Tenzel flap if we don't have enough laxity to get across. Do you feel me pinching you at all? No. Good. So first thing we'll do is see how much laxity there is in that lower lid. And the edges come together pretty easily, that's good news. So it looks like we'll be able to get the edges just to come across, which is exactly what we wanted. Sounds great. So we're gonna remove some of this char here just with abrasion. Okay. And I'll take that clamp. We're gonna use a large chalazian clamp to isolate that lower lid, 15-blade.

CHAPTER 3

And we're actually gonna extend the vertical aspect of this wound so that we get across the entire vertical aspect of the lower tarsus. Likewise, on the lateral side. And then it'll connect the inferior aspect in a pentagonal shape. These incisions are going through skin and orbicularis inferiorly. Okay.

CHAPTER 4

And we're gonna complete the wound with a pair of Westcott scissors. So we do a little bleeding control here. So vertically we're through skin, orbicularis, and tarsus medially and laterally. And inferiorly we're gonna complete the pentagon. So now, we have a lower eyelid defect architecture that we want. We want vertical edges and a pentagon shape on the bottom. Okay, I'll take Mersilene.

CHAPTER 5

We're gonna close this wound in a vertical mattress fashion. I'll pass the first suture through the tarsus. And we're gonna span the wound. And exit on this side, again, through the tarsus. And complete the suture in a vertical mattress fashion, again, through the tarsus, but further from the wound edge. And deeper into the wound edge. We are gonna span the wound. I need a little dab on this side. Dab this one? Dab. Yeah. Okay, and likewise, we're gonna go deep, staying within the tarsus, and ending up lateral to the original entrance point of the suture. Needle off. Load that up again. Dab or Mersilene? Mersilene. So we now pass the Mersilene suture across the tarsus on both ends of the defect. The next step is we're gonna pass a very similar suture through the orbicularis, again, in a vertical mattress fashion. Through orbicularis, close to the wound. Exiting the wound edge in a shallow location. And orbicularis starting wide. I'm passing through deep. Dab over here. Mm-hmm. Again, deep in the orbicularis. Okay. Needle off. Now, we have two sets of Mersilene sutures: one closing the tarsus and one closing the orbicularis. So we'll secure those. And we will leave these ends long. Dab. Mm-hmm.

CHAPTER 6

Now we're gonna work on closing the skin and orbicularis vertically. So we're just gonna take relatively shallow bites of skin and orbicularis and have a running plain gut suture. Short. Follow. Mm-hmm. Dab. Mm-hmm. And with this last pass of the plain gut, we'll put our first knot down, and we're gonna take advantage of the fact that we have this loop because these Mersilene ends will be incorporated into that knot. Adie, hold, press... Hold? Hold that down there. So continue to tie off that plain gut around those long Mersilene ends. Scissors to me. So the plain gut suture can be cut short. And these Mersilene will stay here for about two weeks. We tie them down inferiorly here so that they don't reflect posteriorly and abrade the cornea. You can see here, instead of a full-thickness defect, we have a nicely-everted wound edge on the lid margin, and a nicely-closed superficial layer. And these long Mersilenes are tucked away nicely.

CHAPTER 7

In this case, we were presented with a full-thickness lower eyelid defect of approximately eight millimeters. When we approach this, we have to decide whether there's enough laxity in the lower eyelid to approximate the vertical edges of the wound. For this gentleman, he had enough laxity where we were able to directly close that wound, but we had prepared for an eyelid-lengthening procedure with a Tenzel flap, which would've extended his skin and muscles from the temple and moved it into position in the lower eyelid.