Thyroid Eye Clinic - Shiley Eye Center
From
left to right: David B. Granet, M.D., Leah
Levi, M.D., and Don O. Kikkawa, M.D.
The UCSD Shiley Eye Center recently established
a special clinic to treat Southern Californians with thyroid-related
eye disease. This clinic uniquely offers coordinated, multidisciplinary
care by subspecialists David
B. Granet, M.D., (Eye Alignment Disorders); Don
O. Kikkawa, M.D. (Orbital and Eyelid Surgery); Bobby S. Korn, M.D., Ph.D. (Orbital and Eyelid Surgery)and Leah
Levi, M.D. (Neuro-ophthalmology). Collectively, the team
provides each patient individualized treatment, helping people
with severe functional and cosmetic abnormalities that can result
from this disease.
Early eye symptoms, which may include dryness,
redness, itching, and swelling of the lids, are usually mild.
These mild symptoms can often be successfully treated with frequent
applications of lubricating eye drops and eye covers at night.
In many cases, protrusion of the eye, producing
disfigurement and eyelid retraction may occur and progress to
a point where the eyes do not close completely. Once inflamed,
the eye disease may remain active from several months to as long
as three years. However, the condition generally subsides over
a period of time and, occasionally, improves completely.
Approximately six months after the condition
has stabilized, corrective surgery can be considered. Depending
on how thyroid eye disease has affected the patient's eyes, surgery
options include orbital decompression to place the eye back in
its socket, alleviation of retracted eyelids, loosening of the
eyelid muscles, as well as removal of scar tissue, excessive fatty
tissue and skin.
A small number of patients will develop double
vision (diplopia), which is the result of scarring and inflammation
of the eye movement muscles. In these cases, medical treatment,
radiotherapy, and/or muscle surgery may be required to restore
vision. In addition, Shiley Eye Center is one of the few centers
nationally that offers state-of-the-art Botox Therapy for these
eye alignment disorders.
The expertise of Shiley specialists provides
the best coordinated care for patients suffering from thyroid-eye
disease. To make an appointment with the Thyroid Eye Clinic call
(858) 534-6290.
Shiley's
Unique Thyroid Eye Center
From the Shiley
Eye Center Viewpoint
The UCSD Shiley Eye Center’s Thyroid Eye
Clinic was established in 1997 as the first of its kind in the
United States. Since then, almost 500 patients have been treated
for thyroid-related eye disease at Shiley. Thyroid-related eye
disease is a potentially blinding and disfiguring disorder. The
clinic combines the unique talents of three specialists at Shiley,
David B. Granet, M.D., (Eye Alignment Disorders); Don O. Kikkawa,
M.D. (Orbital and Eyelid Surgery); and Leah Levi, M.D. (Neuro-ophthalmology),
to provide the latest therapeutic advances in treatment, many
of which were developed at the clinic. Thyroid-related eye disease
can affect all aspects of the eye; because of this, all three
specialists are present at the patient’s visit and together
they discuss the situation with the patient and develop an individualized
management plan. This is what makes the UCSD Thyroid Eye Clinic
so unique.
This year, the team published one of the first
studies to report on the psychological disturbance of the disorder.
The study was published in the April 2005 issue of Archives of
Ophthalmology. Drs. Granet, Kikkawa, and Levi showed that patients
with moderate to severe thyroid-related eye disease have a marked
propensity for significant depression, anxiety and mood alteration.
A patient’s susceptibility to these psychological disorders
correlates highly with the disfigurement caused by the disease.
The doctors concluded that the psychological burden must be considered
in every evaluation and that the level of disfigurement may impact
the surgical threshold for treatment.
Thyroid-related eye disease is the result of
an immune system attack that targets the soft tissues of the eyes.
Although there is often a similar autoimmune attack on the thyroid
gland itself, producing abnormalities in the levels of thyroid
hormones, the thyroid gland itself does not actually cause the
eyes to swell and protrude.
Thus, the term thyroid-related eye disease can
sometimes be confusing to both patients and doctors.
Many disillusioned patients travel from afar
to Shiley’s Thyroid Eye Clinic after having been told by
their previous doctor that nothing can be done for their thyroid-
related eye problems. The Thyroid Eye Clinic at the Shiley Eye
Center has been an exceptional resource to frustrated patients
and physicians in Southern California and beyond.