Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01787942

Investigating Abnormal Lipid Layer Thickness in Blepharoplasty Patients

Investigating Abnormal Lipid Layer Thickness and Other Objective Dry Eye Parameters in Patients Seeking Blepharoplasty, and How They Change After Blepharoplasty

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (actual)
Sponsor
Singapore National Eye Centre · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Deficiency in tear film lipid layer thickness (LLT) has been implicated in the development of dry eye symptoms, and is influenced to a significant degree by the anatomy and function of the eyelids. Patients who are considering blepharoplasty, even if it is for cosmetic reasons, may subtle differences in eyelid anatomy that pre-dispose them to having an abnormal tear lipid layer. Moreover, the changes in anatomy and contour of the eyelids following blepharoplasty introduce a whole new group of factors, such as an altered palpebral aperture and altered canthal fixation that can further change the eyelid's ability to maintain a healthy tear lipid layer, for better or for worse. Such changes in tear lipid layer can be detected with the aid of a newly acquired tear interferometer (LipiView, Tearscience Inc.), but has never been done in the context of blepharoplasty management. Due to the strong association between LLT and risk of dry eyes, we hope to investigate if there are significant differences in LLT and other objective dry eye parameters in two situations: 1) patients considering blepharoplasty as compared to other patients not considering such procedures 2) patients before and after undergoing blepharoplasty. The results of these investigations can go towards establishing LLT as an important objective parameter to account for before and after blepharoplasty.

Detailed description

Study Objectives and Purpose 1\. By cross-sectional analysis, determine if there are significant differences in average and SD of LLT in a group of patients who are considering blepharoplasty (cases) as compared to a group of patients from a general ophthalmology clinic who have no lid disturbances (controls). 2a. Via a prospective study, determine the average and standard deviation of LLT in a group of patients undergoing blepharoplasty, and how these change in a one month period after surgery. 2b. Identify, through the same prospective study, if factors such as age and gender are associated with the direction and magnitude of changes in LLT. Study design: Cross-sectional study and Prospective cohort study Rationale: 1. A cross-sectional study comparing LLT, TBUT and corneal staining in patients who are about to undergo blepharoplasty against patients who have no complaints of any lid disturbances. 2. A prospective study observing changes in LLT, TBUT and corneal staining after blepharoplasty, and if age and gender was associated with these changes. Methods: 30 patients who are about to undergo blepharoplasty will be recruited from the oculoplastic clinic. These patients will form the "case" group of the cross-sectional study, and will be on follow-up for the prospective study. Another 30 patients will be recruited from the general ophthalmology (ECS) clinic. These patients are cleared to have no lid disturbances in terms of function or anatomy, and will serve as the "control" group of the cross-sectional study. The following assessments will be performed for each patient who is recruited. For patients involved in the cross-sectional study, they will be assessed only once. For the patients involved in the prospective study, they will be assessed during the pre-surgery consultation, and at the standard post-surgery consultations at 1 week and 1 month after surgery Procedures to be done 1. LLT measurement with LipiView tear interferometer 2. Fluorescein Dye Tear Break-up Time (TBUT) 3. Fluorescein Dye Corneal Staining Duration of study: 1 year

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETear Science LipiViewThe LipiView is a non-invasive instrument that captures live, special and digital images of your tear film and measures its lipid content and quality. This is a standardized test that quantifies your lipid to help your eye doctor determine if you should undergo the LipiFlow procedure or other tear therapies that would treat your condition. In effect, the LipiView allows your eye doctor to visualize your tear films.

Timeline

Start date
2013-01-01
Primary completion
2014-03-01
Completion
2014-03-01
First posted
2013-02-11
Last updated
2014-08-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01787942. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.