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�Jaw Wink�- A Rare Eye Deformity Corrected in a Woman in Delhi

by Rishika Gupta on September 23, 2018 at 12:27 PM

Delhi doctors give Reeta born with "Marcus Gunn Jaw Winking Syndrome" a new lease of life by correcting the rare eye deformity. The rare congenital condition involves a drooping eyelid which briefly opens wider and appears to wink when the jaw is moved.


The condition, known to occur among 1 in 1,000 people, is caused as a result of abnormal connections between the nerves that control the muscles that help in chewing and the muscle that lifts the upper eyelid. This causes the "jaw wink."

‘After the surgery, there was no jaw wink, and the lid position was ideal, and the patient is doing fine, said Doctor.’

Doctors at Aakash Healthcare Super Speciality Hospital here surgically treated the condition using an advanced LPS (Levatorpalpebrae superioris) muscle surgical procedure.

"Reeta was born with the rare eye disorder where her eyelid moves up and down with the movement of the jaw while speaking or while chewing," Vidya Nair Chaudhry, Senior Consultant (Ophthalmology) at the hospital, said in a statement.

"When she was examined, we found that the lid droop was actually very minimal, but the eyelid movement with jaw movement was very marked, one of the most severe jaw winking that we had ever seen," she added.

The syndrome results in a severe cosmetic deformity for the patient and could often lead to severe psychological distress in the patient leading to suicidal behaviors.

In a case of simple ptosis -- drooping or falling of the upper eyelid -- the treatment is a surgical tightening of the weak LPS muscle. But, in her case, such a procedure would correct the ptosis but would make the jaw wink even more prominent.

"The only thing left to do is to completely remove the LPS muscle and replace that with an implant. The removal of the muscle results in a total lid droop, total ptosis, and then a frontalis sling is placed within the lid," Chaudhry explained.

"This is a silicone sling implant that then connects the eyelid to the frontalis muscle of the forehead above the eyebrow, and this muscle then lifts the eyelid up. That way, both the wink and the ptosis are corrected," she noted. After the surgery, there was no jaw wink, and the lid position was ideal, and the patient is doing fine, Chaudhry said.

Source: IANS

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