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Maxillofacial
Prosthodontics.
INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY
Leader in continuing dental education
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Ragas dental college.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Dr M.
Vasanth
kumar
Dr .V
.Rangarajan
Dr
Azhagarasan
Dr Chitra
shankar
Dept of prosthodontics
Faculty
www.indiandentalacademy.com
.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Introduction.
• What is Maxillofacial prosthetics ?
It is the art and science of anatomic,
functional, or cosmetic reconstruction by
means of non living substitutes of those
regions in the maxilla,mandible, and face
that are missing or defective because of
surgical intervention, trauma, pathology, or
developmental or congenital malformation.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Objectives of maxillofacial
prosthetics.
1) Restoration of Esthetics or Cosmetic
appearance of the patient.
2) Restoration of function.
3) Protection of tissues.
4) Therapeutic or healing effect.
5) Psychologic therapy.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Prosthetics Vs Plastic surgery.
• Maxillofacial prosthetist normally provides
appliances and devices to restore esthetics and
function to the patient who cannot be restored to
normal appearance or function by means of
plastic reconstruction
• Limitations for plastic surgery:
1. Advanced age of patient.
2. Poor health
3. Very large deformity
4. Poor blood supply on post-radiated tissue.
5. Systemic diseases.
6. Economic conditions.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Team approach.
1. Maxillofacial prosthodontist.
2. The surgeon.
3. The radiotherapist.
4. The speech therapist.
5. The psychiatrist.
6. The social worker.
7. Other dental specialists.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Diagnosis and treatment planning
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Impression making
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Materials used in maxillofacial
prosthetics.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Retention of prosthesis.
• Close evaluation of a case with the surgeon
before and during surgery helps in finding
means to create irregular defects for
enhancing anatomic retention
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Retention in Intraoral prosthesis.
• Anatomic retention- By Teeth, Mucosal and
bony tissues.
Factors aiding in anatomic retention
– Anatomic undercuts –
– Large alveolar ridges
– High palatal vaults.
– Proper occlusion.
– Proper post dam
– Surface adhesion
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Mechanical retention
• Temporary
– different clasps made of wrought wire.
– Preformed stainless steel bands or crowns
• Permanent mechanical retention
– Cast clasps.
– Precision attachments:Prefabricated and custom made.
– Snap on attachment
– Telescopic crowns and thimble crown.
– Gate type or swing lock devices
– Intermaxillary “george washington” springs
– Screws,Implants,Suction cups,Adhesives, Magnets and
occlusion.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Extraoral retention.
• Anatomic retention.
– Hard tissues act as a base against which to seat the
prosthesis.
– Soft tissues
• Mechanical retention.
– Magents
– Eyeglasses
– Snap buttons and straps
– adhesives
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Intraoral prosthesis
• Obturators
– a prosthesis used to close a congenital or
acquired tissue opening ,primarily of the
hard palate and /or contiguous alveolar
structures.
– Prosthetic restorations of the defect often
includes use of a surgical obturator,
interim obturator, and definitive
obturator.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Functions of obturator
1) keeps the wound area clean and to enhance healing
2) To reshape or reconstruct the palatal contour/or soft
palate
3) Improves speech
4) Can be used to correct lip and cheek position
5) Improves mastication.
6) Reduces the flow of exudates in the mouth
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Classification :-
Congenital Defects Acquired Defects
•Simple obturator
•Simple with Velopharyngeal extn..
•Overlay or a super imposed denture.
•Surgical obturator.
•Interim obturator
•Definitive obturator
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Variants :-
• Inflatable obturator bulb.
• Magnets between bulb & denture.
• Hollow silicone obturator bulb.
• Rigid hollow bulb obturator.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Surgical obturator
• Facilitates oral function
immediately after surgery,
• Patient may regain speech
within a normal range .
• Wrought wire clasps are used .
• Constructed from preoperative
impression cast.
• It eliminates the need for the
nasogastric tube.
• It can serve as matrix for
surgical dressing.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Temporary obturator
• After 7-10 days ,the prosthesis is removed and
reprocessed with new acrylic resin.this becomes a
temporary obturator and serves for 4-6 months of
healing period.
• Periodic modifications with tissue conditioners
• Multiple wrought wire clasps are used
• Mastication on the surgical side are avoided
• Prosthetic teeth may be added to enhance
esthetics.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Definitive obturator.
• Constructed from the post surgical
maxillary cast.
• Has a false palate ,false ridge ,teeth ,and a
closed bulb which is hollow.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
•Patient examination and preparation for impression making.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
•Sectional impression of dentulous side.
•Compound impression on the defect side.
•Final impression.
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•Master cast is poured.
•Jaw relation record established.
•Teeth setting is done.
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•The obturator is retrieved.
•The roof is cut.
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•The obturator is finished, trimmed and placed in the mouth
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ADVANTAGES:
Lighter.
Minimal stress & Maximal comfort.
Motivates the patient to clean.
Simple.
Accurate.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Quality of retention depends on
• Muscular control.
• Size of surgical cavity
• availability of tissue undercut around the
cavity
• Direct and indirect retention provided by
any remaining teeth.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Retentive regions are
• Fibrous tissue scar bands in the buccal
sulcus.
• Rolled edge of the palatal remnants
• Base of the nasal mucosa of the nasal
septum.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Forces on Obturators
These forces can be
• Vertical dislodging force
• Occlusal vertical force
• Torque or rotational force
• Lateral force
• Anterior posterior force.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
dislodging and rotational forces
The weight of the nasal extension of the
obturator exerts dislodging and rotational
forces on abutment teeth.
To resist these forces
-weight of the obturator be minimal
-direct retention
-extending the buccal wall of the
nasal extension superiorly.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Relation of the scar band to the
lateral portion of the obturator.
• Buccal scar band will
develop at height of
previous vestibule
where buccal mucosa
and skin graft in
surgical defect join.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Surgical considerations
• Efforts should be directed towards
conversion a potential class I maxillary
defect into a class II defect to provide a
superior prosthesis both functionally and
esthetically.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Recommendations to surgeon.
1. Preservation of the contra lateral anterior
teeth,if it does not compromise tumor
eradication.
2. If the palatal mucosa is not invaded by the
tumor,it is preserved and reflected to
cover the medial wall. this procedure
provides superior tissue quality coverage
for the nasal septum.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
3. Preservation of the posterior hard plate on
the defect side if the tumor is situated
anteriorly or laterally.
4. Resection through the socket of the tooth
closest to the specimen allows for
maintenance of the proximal alveolar
bone adjacent to the abutment tooth.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Classification of Obturators
According to Origin of discrepancy :
- congenital
– acquired
According to Location of defect
According to physiological movement of the
surrounding tissue.
a. Static obturator
b. Functional obturator.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Factors to consider for superior
height of bulb.
1. If patients speech cannot be understood the bulb
should be extended upward.
2. With maxillary resection much of the bone
support for the cheek is removed.the obturator
bulb height will reestablish this contour.
3. According to brown (1968) height of the bulb
relates to the retention of the completed
obturator.
4. Amount of Mouth opening of the patient
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Guiding flange
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Speech aids
• These are prosthesis that are functionally
shaped to the velopharyngeal musculature
to restore or compensate for areas of the
soft palate that are deficient because of
surgery or congenital anomaly.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Palatal augmentation
• If a part of tongue is lost ,the ability of the
tongue to reach the palate for appropriate
speech and swallowing is compromised.
• The contour of palate can be augmented by
a prosthesis to fill the space of donder so
that a food bolus can be more easily moved
posteriorly into the oropharynx.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Reasons of eye loss.
• Cancer , e.g. Retinoblastoma.
• Trauma
• Congenital birth deficiency
• Blind painful eye
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Evisceration
• The muscles that
control eye movement
remain attached to the
sclera.
• Evisceration generally
gives better movement
to the ocular prosthesis
(artificial eye).
www.indiandentalacademy.com
This is a 7 year old child who
came to dept of prosthodontics
ragas dental college 4 weeks
after exenteration of the right
orbital contents. he is other wise
healthy and has normal vision in
left eye.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Type of surgery Prosthetic
rehabilitation by
Enucleation Ocular prosthesis
Evisceration Ocular prosthesis
Exenteration Orbital
prosthesis.
Types of eye surgery and their
corresponding prosthesis
www.indiandentalacademy.com
• Ocular prosthesis
– An ocular prosthesis is an
artificial replacement for
the Bulb of the eye.
• Orbital prosthesis
– When the entire contents
of the orbitare removed-
the artificial replacement
is referred to as an orbital
prosthesis.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Eye as focus of attention
• The movement(black
lines) show how much
of the time an
observer’s eyes search
the eyes of the person
observed.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Aims/Advantages of eye
prosthesis
1. Comfort
2. Cosmetics- Restore facial contour.
3. Bony Orbital Wall, and Eyelid development.
4. To maintain the volume of the eye socket
5. Protects delicate tissues and maintains proper
humidity for Mucosa or orbital structures.
6. Provides a great psychological benefit in the
rehabilitation of the patient.
7. Quick and early adjustment to monocular vision.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
acrylic v/s Silicone Prosthesis
Acrylic Medical grade
silicone
Artificial look More natural look
light heavy
affordable Expensive
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Impression
• Areas for impression defined and boxed.
Length –from forehead down to
the top lip.
Breadth - from tragus to tragus.
• Impression procedure.
• Pouring the impression.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Eyeball component
• The eyeball component
is custom designed and
fabricated in acrylic, with
regard to size and
colour, to match the
contra lateral eye, as
closely as possible.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Eye alignment
• Eye must be in exactly the right position or the
prosthesis will look strange and unreal.
• Determining factors
-Inter-pupillary distance
-Back vertex alignment
-Horizontal alignment
www.indiandentalacademy.com
• Sculpting
– Great care is taken during
carving of the prosthesis
so as to 'capture' the most
constant appearance.
– It is done with the patient
present .
• Color matching
• Finishing
• Eyelashes and eyebrows
are added
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Spectacle considerations
• The frame should mask as
much of the margins as
possible .
• Patients with orbital defects
are advised to wear lightly
tinted glasses to help hide the
prosthetic margins and
disguise that there is no
movement in the prosthetic
eye.
• Hinge of the spectacle arm is
locked to prevent any
accidental opening .
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Limitations
•It will take some time to adjust to using one
eye, but almost all patients learn to
compensate during the first year after surgery.
•The socket will grow with age and hence the
need for new prosthesis frequently.
•Since the extraocular muscles are not
attached to the prosthesis, it does not move as
a natural eye.
•Almost all patients learn to compensate during the
first year after surgery.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
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Ear prosthesis
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Thank you
For more details please visit
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com

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Maxillofacil prosthodontics/ dental education in india

  • 1. Maxillofacial Prosthodontics. INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY Leader in continuing dental education www.indiandentalacademy.com www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 3. Dr M. Vasanth kumar Dr .V .Rangarajan Dr Azhagarasan Dr Chitra shankar Dept of prosthodontics Faculty www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 5. Introduction. • What is Maxillofacial prosthetics ? It is the art and science of anatomic, functional, or cosmetic reconstruction by means of non living substitutes of those regions in the maxilla,mandible, and face that are missing or defective because of surgical intervention, trauma, pathology, or developmental or congenital malformation. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 6. Objectives of maxillofacial prosthetics. 1) Restoration of Esthetics or Cosmetic appearance of the patient. 2) Restoration of function. 3) Protection of tissues. 4) Therapeutic or healing effect. 5) Psychologic therapy. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 7. Prosthetics Vs Plastic surgery. • Maxillofacial prosthetist normally provides appliances and devices to restore esthetics and function to the patient who cannot be restored to normal appearance or function by means of plastic reconstruction • Limitations for plastic surgery: 1. Advanced age of patient. 2. Poor health 3. Very large deformity 4. Poor blood supply on post-radiated tissue. 5. Systemic diseases. 6. Economic conditions. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 8. Team approach. 1. Maxillofacial prosthodontist. 2. The surgeon. 3. The radiotherapist. 4. The speech therapist. 5. The psychiatrist. 6. The social worker. 7. Other dental specialists. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 9. Diagnosis and treatment planning www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 11. Materials used in maxillofacial prosthetics. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 12. Retention of prosthesis. • Close evaluation of a case with the surgeon before and during surgery helps in finding means to create irregular defects for enhancing anatomic retention www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 13. Retention in Intraoral prosthesis. • Anatomic retention- By Teeth, Mucosal and bony tissues. Factors aiding in anatomic retention – Anatomic undercuts – – Large alveolar ridges – High palatal vaults. – Proper occlusion. – Proper post dam – Surface adhesion www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 14. Mechanical retention • Temporary – different clasps made of wrought wire. – Preformed stainless steel bands or crowns • Permanent mechanical retention – Cast clasps. – Precision attachments:Prefabricated and custom made. – Snap on attachment – Telescopic crowns and thimble crown. – Gate type or swing lock devices – Intermaxillary “george washington” springs – Screws,Implants,Suction cups,Adhesives, Magnets and occlusion. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 15. Extraoral retention. • Anatomic retention. – Hard tissues act as a base against which to seat the prosthesis. – Soft tissues • Mechanical retention. – Magents – Eyeglasses – Snap buttons and straps – adhesives www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 16. Intraoral prosthesis • Obturators – a prosthesis used to close a congenital or acquired tissue opening ,primarily of the hard palate and /or contiguous alveolar structures. – Prosthetic restorations of the defect often includes use of a surgical obturator, interim obturator, and definitive obturator. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 17. Functions of obturator 1) keeps the wound area clean and to enhance healing 2) To reshape or reconstruct the palatal contour/or soft palate 3) Improves speech 4) Can be used to correct lip and cheek position 5) Improves mastication. 6) Reduces the flow of exudates in the mouth www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 18. Classification :- Congenital Defects Acquired Defects •Simple obturator •Simple with Velopharyngeal extn.. •Overlay or a super imposed denture. •Surgical obturator. •Interim obturator •Definitive obturator www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 19. Variants :- • Inflatable obturator bulb. • Magnets between bulb & denture. • Hollow silicone obturator bulb. • Rigid hollow bulb obturator. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 20. Surgical obturator • Facilitates oral function immediately after surgery, • Patient may regain speech within a normal range . • Wrought wire clasps are used . • Constructed from preoperative impression cast. • It eliminates the need for the nasogastric tube. • It can serve as matrix for surgical dressing. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 21. Temporary obturator • After 7-10 days ,the prosthesis is removed and reprocessed with new acrylic resin.this becomes a temporary obturator and serves for 4-6 months of healing period. • Periodic modifications with tissue conditioners • Multiple wrought wire clasps are used • Mastication on the surgical side are avoided • Prosthetic teeth may be added to enhance esthetics. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 22. Definitive obturator. • Constructed from the post surgical maxillary cast. • Has a false palate ,false ridge ,teeth ,and a closed bulb which is hollow. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 23. •Patient examination and preparation for impression making. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 24. •Sectional impression of dentulous side. •Compound impression on the defect side. •Final impression. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 25. •Master cast is poured. •Jaw relation record established. •Teeth setting is done. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 26. •The obturator is retrieved. •The roof is cut. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 27. •The obturator is finished, trimmed and placed in the mouth www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 28. ADVANTAGES: Lighter. Minimal stress & Maximal comfort. Motivates the patient to clean. Simple. Accurate. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 29. Quality of retention depends on • Muscular control. • Size of surgical cavity • availability of tissue undercut around the cavity • Direct and indirect retention provided by any remaining teeth. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 30. Retentive regions are • Fibrous tissue scar bands in the buccal sulcus. • Rolled edge of the palatal remnants • Base of the nasal mucosa of the nasal septum. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 31. Forces on Obturators These forces can be • Vertical dislodging force • Occlusal vertical force • Torque or rotational force • Lateral force • Anterior posterior force. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 32. dislodging and rotational forces The weight of the nasal extension of the obturator exerts dislodging and rotational forces on abutment teeth. To resist these forces -weight of the obturator be minimal -direct retention -extending the buccal wall of the nasal extension superiorly. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 33. Relation of the scar band to the lateral portion of the obturator. • Buccal scar band will develop at height of previous vestibule where buccal mucosa and skin graft in surgical defect join. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 34. Surgical considerations • Efforts should be directed towards conversion a potential class I maxillary defect into a class II defect to provide a superior prosthesis both functionally and esthetically. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 35. Recommendations to surgeon. 1. Preservation of the contra lateral anterior teeth,if it does not compromise tumor eradication. 2. If the palatal mucosa is not invaded by the tumor,it is preserved and reflected to cover the medial wall. this procedure provides superior tissue quality coverage for the nasal septum. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 36. 3. Preservation of the posterior hard plate on the defect side if the tumor is situated anteriorly or laterally. 4. Resection through the socket of the tooth closest to the specimen allows for maintenance of the proximal alveolar bone adjacent to the abutment tooth. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 37. Classification of Obturators According to Origin of discrepancy : - congenital – acquired According to Location of defect According to physiological movement of the surrounding tissue. a. Static obturator b. Functional obturator. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 38. Factors to consider for superior height of bulb. 1. If patients speech cannot be understood the bulb should be extended upward. 2. With maxillary resection much of the bone support for the cheek is removed.the obturator bulb height will reestablish this contour. 3. According to brown (1968) height of the bulb relates to the retention of the completed obturator. 4. Amount of Mouth opening of the patient www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 40. Speech aids • These are prosthesis that are functionally shaped to the velopharyngeal musculature to restore or compensate for areas of the soft palate that are deficient because of surgery or congenital anomaly. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 41. Palatal augmentation • If a part of tongue is lost ,the ability of the tongue to reach the palate for appropriate speech and swallowing is compromised. • The contour of palate can be augmented by a prosthesis to fill the space of donder so that a food bolus can be more easily moved posteriorly into the oropharynx. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 42. Reasons of eye loss. • Cancer , e.g. Retinoblastoma. • Trauma • Congenital birth deficiency • Blind painful eye www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 43. Evisceration • The muscles that control eye movement remain attached to the sclera. • Evisceration generally gives better movement to the ocular prosthesis (artificial eye). www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 44. This is a 7 year old child who came to dept of prosthodontics ragas dental college 4 weeks after exenteration of the right orbital contents. he is other wise healthy and has normal vision in left eye. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 45. Type of surgery Prosthetic rehabilitation by Enucleation Ocular prosthesis Evisceration Ocular prosthesis Exenteration Orbital prosthesis. Types of eye surgery and their corresponding prosthesis www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 46. • Ocular prosthesis – An ocular prosthesis is an artificial replacement for the Bulb of the eye. • Orbital prosthesis – When the entire contents of the orbitare removed- the artificial replacement is referred to as an orbital prosthesis. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 47. Eye as focus of attention • The movement(black lines) show how much of the time an observer’s eyes search the eyes of the person observed. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 48. Aims/Advantages of eye prosthesis 1. Comfort 2. Cosmetics- Restore facial contour. 3. Bony Orbital Wall, and Eyelid development. 4. To maintain the volume of the eye socket 5. Protects delicate tissues and maintains proper humidity for Mucosa or orbital structures. 6. Provides a great psychological benefit in the rehabilitation of the patient. 7. Quick and early adjustment to monocular vision. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 49. acrylic v/s Silicone Prosthesis Acrylic Medical grade silicone Artificial look More natural look light heavy affordable Expensive www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 50. Impression • Areas for impression defined and boxed. Length –from forehead down to the top lip. Breadth - from tragus to tragus. • Impression procedure. • Pouring the impression. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 52. Eyeball component • The eyeball component is custom designed and fabricated in acrylic, with regard to size and colour, to match the contra lateral eye, as closely as possible. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 53. Eye alignment • Eye must be in exactly the right position or the prosthesis will look strange and unreal. • Determining factors -Inter-pupillary distance -Back vertex alignment -Horizontal alignment www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 54. • Sculpting – Great care is taken during carving of the prosthesis so as to 'capture' the most constant appearance. – It is done with the patient present . • Color matching • Finishing • Eyelashes and eyebrows are added www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 55. Spectacle considerations • The frame should mask as much of the margins as possible . • Patients with orbital defects are advised to wear lightly tinted glasses to help hide the prosthetic margins and disguise that there is no movement in the prosthetic eye. • Hinge of the spectacle arm is locked to prevent any accidental opening . www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 57. Limitations •It will take some time to adjust to using one eye, but almost all patients learn to compensate during the first year after surgery. •The socket will grow with age and hence the need for new prosthesis frequently. •Since the extraocular muscles are not attached to the prosthesis, it does not move as a natural eye. •Almost all patients learn to compensate during the first year after surgery. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 71. Thank you For more details please visit www.indiandentalacademy.com www.indiandentalacademy.com

Notas do Editor

  1. Determine the best close for your audience and your presentation. Close with a summary; offer options; recommend a strategy; suggest a plan; set a goal. Keep your focus throughout your presentation, and you will more likely achieve your purpose.
  2. The most common causes of one or both eye loss are cancers such as retinoblastoma,trauma,congenital birth deficiency,blind painful eye.
  3. In evisceration the contents of the eye (iris, lens, vitreous, retina, and choroid) are removed leaving behind a pocket of sclera. The muscles that control eye movement remain attached to the sclera and as a result evisceration generally gives better movement to the ocular prosthesis. The child is fit for a ocular prosthesis 4-6 weeks after the operation.
  4. so enucleation and evisceration warrent ocular prosthesis and exentration needs an orbital prosthesis .
  5. An ocular prosthesis is an artificial replacement for the Bulb of the eye.it is indicated in enucleation and evisceration.
  6. This diagram is created from a photograph of a face . superimposed on the second picture are the recorded eye movements of a person observing this face. The movements show how much time an observer’s eyes search the eyes of the person observed. this highlights the importance of the eyes in social interactions.
  7. An eye prosthesis provides Comfort, Cosmetics, Restore facial contour. Helps in Continued Bony Orbital Wall, and Eyelid development and also maintains the volume of the eye socket
  8. Acrylic as a prosthetic material gives Artificial look,is lighter,and affordable and easily availble.silicone gives More natural look, is heavy and Expensive.
  9. A partial impression of the face usually suffice instead of full impression.Patient is placed on the chair in supine position.Towels placed to protect clothes from spillage.Tissue undercuts are packed with Vaseline gauze.
  10. A base plate is adapted to the model –it can be of acrylic or wax .Identifying the margin areas of the prosthesis and trimming the base accordingly.
  11. The eyeball component is custom designed and fabricated in acrylic, with regard to size and colour, to match the contra lateral eye, as closely as possible.
  12. Eye must be in exactly the right position or the prosthesis will look strange and unreal.Determining factors are -Inter-pupillary distance ,-Back vertex alignment and -Horizontal alignment .
  13. Great care is taken during carving of the prosthesis so as to 'capture' the most constant appearance.
  14. Prosthesis and spectacles are attached with self cure acrylic. Hinge of the spectacle arm is locked with self cure acrylic to prevent any accidental opening.
  15. It will take some time to adjust to using one eye, but almost all patients learn to compensate during the first year after surgery.The socket will grow with age and hence the need for new prosthesis frequently. Since the extraocular muscles are not attached to the prosthesis, it does not move as a natural eye.