Neuschwander Timothy B, Chang Eli L, Sadun Alfredo A
Doheny Eye Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Ophthalmic Plast Reconstr Surg. 2005 Nov;21(6):431-4. doi: 10.1097/01.iop.0000180751.06033.9f.
This study examined the relation between effective orbital volume increment and proptosis induced by an inflatable orbital implant in a human cadaver orbit.
A 25-ml inflatable latex balloon was inserted between the periorbita and orbital floor in 15 human cadavers. Hertel measurements were taken for each milliliter over a total 7-ml volume increment. Five trials per orbit for 15 cadavers resulted in 525 data points.
Average exophthalmos per milliliter of volume increment was plotted over 7 ml, using 1-ml volume increments. The resultant curve, which was termed a Hertel curve, was linear over 7 ml (R > 99%) and had a slope of 0.62 mm per milliliter of volume increment.
An inflatable orbital implant is an effective tool for introducing a specified amount of volume in the cadaver orbit. The predictable relation between proptosis and volume increment (Hertel curve) may be a useful tool for surgeons in planning the size of an implant required to surgically correct enophthalmos.