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Eyelid Hollowing Improved Through Ptosis Correction and Orbital Fat Repositioning.

[ Before / Three Months After]

Before and three months after ptosis correction with orbital fat repositioning, illustrating improved eyelid contour and pupil exposure
Three months after ptosis correction with orbital fat repositioning, showing stable eyelid opening and improved upper eyelid contour.


Three months after ptosis correction with orbital fat repositioning

Eyelid hollowing is often discussed as a problem of volume deficiency.
In clinical practice, however, hollowing frequently reflects a combination of functional imbalance and structural change.

In this case, eyelid hollowing improved through a combination of ptosis correction and limited orbital fat repositioning.

The primary issue was functional imbalance.

Before surgery, the patient had difficulty opening the eyes comfortably.
To compensate, the forehead and brow muscles were continuously engaged.

This compensatory effort created chronic tension in the upper eyelid
and altered its resting position over time.
As a result, the eyelid appeared hollow—even without severe volume loss.

Ptosis correction changed the forces acting on the eyelid.

The first priority was to restore stable eyelid opening.
Ptosis correction reduced the need for compensatory effort
and normalized how force was distributed across the upper eyelid.

Once excessive tension was relieved,
the eyelid was able to settle into a more natural position.

However, ptosis correction alone was not sufficient to fully address the hollowed contour.

Orbital fat repositioning was used in a limited and supportive role.

Because functional correction alone did not completely resolve the hollowing,
existing orbital fat was carefully mobilized and repositioned to support the upper eyelid.

No additional volume was introduced.
The goal was not to “fill” the eyelid,
but to reinforce structural support within the limits of the patient’s anatomy.

The result at three months.

At three months after surgery,
eyelid opening remains stable and comfortable.
The upper eyelid contour appears smoother and more balanced than before surgery.

While eyelid hollowing was not eliminated entirely,
it improved to a realistic and acceptable degree without excessive intervention.

This case demonstrates an important principle in eyelid surgery.

Eyelid hollowing is not always a problem that can—or should—be fully corrected.
Meaningful improvement often depends on restoring function first
and using structural support judiciously.

In revision surgery, restraint is not a limitation.
It is part of the solution.


Seeing the Eye as a Whole, Not in Parts
A Clinic Dedicated to Eyelid Revision Surgery in Korea
Ahnsungmin Plastic Surgery