| Literature DB >> 25231188 |
Himanshi Aggarwal1, Saumyendra V Singh2, Pradeep Kumar1, Arun Kumar Singh3.
Abstract
One of the most common tumors of the eye diagnosed in childhood is retinoblastoma, which mandates enucleation with adjunctive chemotherapy and radiotherapy to save the patient's life. The most common late enucleation complication is post-enucleation socket syndrome (PESS), which poses a management dilemma for the prosthodontist and surgeon, along with being a major esthetic concern for the patient. The reconstruction of such sockets is complex. The purpose of this clinical report is to describe the rehabilitation of such a pediatric patient with severe PESS. The patient was successfully rehabilitated by presurgical conformer therapy, socket reconstruction surgery with non-meshed intermediate split thickness skin graft (STSG)/Blair-Brown graft, and postsurgical conformer stent. This was followed by fabrication of a custom ocular prosthesis, to achieve favorable functional, physical, and psychological effects.Entities:
Keywords: Anophthalmic socket reconstruction; enucleation; ocular prosthesis; post-enucleation socket syndrome; skin graft; socket contracture
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25231188 DOI: 10.1111/jopr.12222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prosthodont ISSN: 1059-941X Impact factor: 2.752