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Dive into the research topics where Sima Das is active.

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Featured researches published by Sima Das.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2010

Nonsurgical management of epiblepharon using hyaluronic acid gel.

Milind N. Naik; Mohd Javed Ali; Sima Das; Santosh G. Honavar

A 4-month-old infant with epiblepharon of the right lower eyelid presented with medial eyelashes touching the corneal surface in primary gaze and resultant punctate epithelial keratopathy. Hyaluronic acid gel (Juvederm Ultra) 0.2 ml was injected in the suborbicular plane in the valley above the abnormal skin fold. Immediate out-turning of the eyelid margin was obtained, which persisted at 1-week, 1-month, and 4.5-month follow-up visits with no lash-corneal touch even in down gaze. Epiblepharon, which often self corrects with increasing age, can be effectively corrected with this minimally invasive nonsurgical option when it is symptomatic, and is a threat to the corneal health.


Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery | 2009

Blepharoplasty: An Overview

Milind N. Naik; Santosh G. Honavar; Sima Das; Savari Desai; Niteen Dhepe

Blepharoplasty plays a vital role in facial rejuvenation, with direct aesthetic relation to the brow and the cheek. Upper and lower eyelid blepharoplasty are indicated for the treatment of excess skin and/or orbital fat. Preoperative evaluation should include a thorough medical and ophthalmic history, along with a detailed cutaneous and eye examination. Symptoms of preexisting dry eye should be elicited preoperatively, as they directly correlate with postoperative complications. Physical examination should take into account brow position, eyelid ptosis, lower eyelid position, and cheek projection. Blepharoplasty can be performed by many operative approaches. This review highlights the standard skin-only upper blepharoplasty and lower eyelid conservative fat excision or repositioning.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2011

An extraordinary orbital foreign body.

Milind N. Naik; Sima Das; Fasina Oluyemi; Santosh G. Honavar

The authors report a unique case of a broken motorbike handle that presented as a bilateral orbital foreign body. A 30-year-old male sustained an injury to the right side of his face when he skidded from his motorbike while riding. He had bilateral sudden loss of vision and presented to emergency services with bilateral proptosis, motility restriction, and a right lower eyelid laceration. CT scan revealed a 7-cm-long motorbike handle lodged in the retrobulbar space of both orbits, close to the cribriform plate. Left lateral orbitotomy was performed to remove the foreign body; the right eye regained normal vision and function. The unique features of this case include the nature of the foreign body, its bilateral location, its proximity to the optic nerve and cribriform plate, and the challenges in its removal. The clinical presentation and management is presented, along with the surgical video.


Orbit | 2009

Centurion Syndrome: Clinical Presentation and Surgical Outcome

Ramesh Murthy; Santosh G. Honavar; Milind N. Naik; Vikas Menon; Anirban Bhaduri; Sima Das

ABSTRACT Purpose: To describe the clinical signs and outcome of surgery in cases with Centurion syndrome and highlight the clinical presentation of this syndrome. Methods: A retrospective review of records of patients with Centurion syndrome who underwent surgery between January 2002 and July 2007. The position of the punctum, nasal bridge prominence, Hertel exophthalmometry and the presence of inferiorly directed sharp angulation of the medial canthus was noted. The patients underwent anterior canthal tendon release, punctoplasty or medial conjunctivoplasty or a combination of these. Results: Of the 13 cases, 10 had been treated medically elsewhere. The mean age of onset was 20.7 years. Most of the patients were male 10 (76.9%). A prominent nasal bridge was demonstrable in 9 (69.2%) patients and sharp inferior angulation of the medial canthus, the ‘beak’ sign was present in 9 (69.2%) cases. Anterior canthal tendon release alone was performed in 4 patients, in combination with punctoplasty in 5 and with conjunctivoplasty in 4. Watering resolved in 10 patients. 3 patients who had a combination of anterior canthal tendon release and punctoplasty had persistent but asymptomatic epiphora. Discussion: Centurion syndrome is characterised by the abnormal anterior insertion of the medial canthal tendon with displacement of the punctum out of the lacrimal lake. Most cases present with unexplained watering. Surgical management by anterior canthal tendon release with or without conjunctivoplasty or lower lid retractor plication is usually successful.


Saudi Journal of Ophthalmology | 2017

Frontalis sling surgery: A treatment modality for cyclic oculomotor nerve palsy

Smriti Bansal; Sima Das

Cyclic oculomotor nerve paresis and spasm are a rare disorder characterized by alternating spastic and paretic phase of the muscles supplied by the oculomotor nerve. A 26-year-old male presented with abnormal right eyelid movements since early childhood. Examination findings were consistent with diagnosis of right eye cyclic oculomotor nerve palsy. A paretic phase with complete upper eyelid ptosis, exotropia, hypotropia and dilatation of the pupil was followed by a phase of orthotropia, the absence of ptosis and normal pupil size. The whole cycle was of about 100 s duration with patient having no voluntary control over the eyelid movements and ocular alignment. Systemic evaluation and neuroimaging were normal. A tarsofrontal silicone sling surgery done for the ptosis correction decreased the eyelid movements during different phases of the cycle.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2017

Lacrimal Sac Pneumatocele Following Blunt Nasal Trauma

Sima Das; Mohammad Javed Ali; Smriti Bansal; Manpreet Chugh; Nishi Gupta; Vidya Janaki

Pneumatocele of the lacrimal sac is an uncommon entity and has been rarely reported in literature. The valvular function of the Hasners valve at the lower end of nasolacrimal duct is presumed to prevent the retrograde reflux of air into the lacrimal sac with increased intranasal pressure as in valsalva maneuver. Loss of this valvular function as noted with persistent positive airway pressure ventilation can cause retrograde air reflux into lacrimal sac. The authors report a case of lacrimal sac pneumatocele which developed following blunt nasal trauma involving the bony nasolacrimal duct.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2010

Maternal skin allograft for cicatricial ectropion in congenital icthyosis.

Sima Das; Santosh G. Honavar; Niteen Dhepe; Milind N. Naik


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2017

Re: “Evisceration With Implant Placement Posterior to the Posterior Sclera”

Manpreet Chugh; Sima Das; Smriti Bansal; Sweety Tiple


Archive | 2015

Chapter-075 Orbital Implants

Sima Das; Santosh G. Honavar


Archive | 2015

Chapter-077 Enucleation

Sima Das; Santosh G. Honavar

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Milind N. Naik

L V Prasad Eye Institute

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Ramesh Murthy

L V Prasad Eye Institute

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Savari Desai

L V Prasad Eye Institute

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Vikas Menon

L V Prasad Eye Institute

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