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Eyelid Surgery: Medical and Cosmetic Benefits of Blepharoplasty

Blepharoplasty corrects drooping eyelids that can impair vision and affect appearance. A guide to understanding when eyelid surgery is medical versus cosmetic.

Miss Tina Khanam
3 min read

Drooping or heavy eyelids are one of the most common concerns patients bring to an ophthalmic consultation — and understandably so. Excess eyelid skin can make you look permanently tired, older than you feel, and in more significant cases, can physically obstruct your upper visual field, making activities like driving, reading, and using a computer genuinely difficult.

Blepharoplasty is a surgical procedure that removes excess skin, muscle, and sometimes fat from the upper or lower eyelids to restore a more youthful, open appearance and improve visual function. When drooping is severe enough to impair the visual field (measured by a formal visual field test), the procedure is classified as medically necessary rather than purely cosmetic.

Upper eyelid blepharoplasty is the most commonly performed oculoplastic procedure. Miss Khanam makes an incision in the natural eyelid crease, removes the precise amount of excess tissue, and closes with fine sutures that are virtually invisible once healed. The scar sits within the natural fold and is typically imperceptible within a few weeks.

Lower eyelid blepharoplasty addresses puffiness or "bags" caused by herniated orbital fat pads. This can be performed through a transconjunctival approach (inside the eyelid, leaving no visible scar) or an external incision just below the lash line, depending on whether excess skin also needs to be removed.

It is important to distinguish blepharoplasty from ptosis repair. Ptosis is a drooping of the eyelid itself due to a weakened or stretched levator muscle, rather than excess skin weighing the lid down. The two conditions can coexist, and Miss Khanam will carefully assess whether you need blepharoplasty, ptosis surgery, or both to achieve the best functional and aesthetic result.

Recovery from eyelid surgery is generally straightforward. Bruising and swelling are expected for seven to fourteen days, with cold compresses and head elevation helping to minimise these. Most patients feel comfortable appearing in public within ten to fourteen days, and the final result continues to refine over three to six months as residual swelling resolves.

Risks include infection, bleeding, asymmetry, dry eye, and very rarely, impaired eyelid closure. These are minimised by choosing a surgeon with specific oculoplastic training and experience — understanding the delicate anatomy of the eyelid and its relationship to the eye is essential for safe surgery.

Eyelid surgery at K Vision Centre starts from £2,200 per eyelid (upper), with combined upper and lower procedures and ptosis repair also available. Miss Tina Khanam offers consultations at Harley Street, Spire Gatwick Park, and Spire St Anthony's — book an assessment to discuss your options.

Written by

Miss Tina Khanam

Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon at K Vision Centre

Learn more about Miss Tina Khanam

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