Ophthalmic Plastic / Orbital
Ophthalmic Plastic, Orbital & Reconstructive
Surgery deals primarily with diseases involving tissues surrounding the eyeball,
but which can also affect the appearance or function of the eye. It includes
diseases of the eyelids, the lacrimal system (tear production and drainage),
the orbit (the nerves, muscles, and blood vessels in the bony cavity surrounding
the eye) and the facial areas adjacent tot the eye. Ophthalmic plastic surgeons
are board certified ophthalmologists who have completed several years of additional,
highly specialized training in plastic surgery.
Who Does It Strike?
Conditions interfering with properly functioning eyelids, tear production, and
optic muscles can be the result of birth defects, injury, infection, or cancers,
and thus effect a wide range of potential patients.
Some of conditions we treat:
- Aesthetic surgery of the periorbital area including
eyelids, brows & midface
- Droopy eyelids (ptosis)
- Eyelid turning in or out (entropion or ectropion)
- Graves Disease (thyroid eye disease)
- Orbital decompression (to push the eyes back
in to the socket)
- Lid recession surgery (to lower the eyelids)
- Cancer of the tissue surrounding or behind the eye
- Excision of cancers
- Reconstruction after removal of cancer
- Reconstruction of the orbit and the area surrounding
the eye after trauma
- Surgery of the tear drainage system
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Eli L. Chang, MD
Dr. Chang completed his medical degree at Tulane University School
of Medicine. He completed his internship training at Charity Hospital
of New Orleans, followed by residency at The New York Hospital
/ Cornell Medical Center and a fellowship in Oculoplastic Surgery
and Ophthalmic Oncology at the Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary
/ Harvard Medical School. |
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