Sunken Eyes? How To Treat Tear Trough Deformity: Causes And Possible Remedies
Stay Young Bureau | Sep 18, 2023, 14:00 IST
Sunken Eyes? How To Treat Tear Trough Deformity: Causes And Possible Remedies
Under-eye hollows, sunken eyes, skeleton eyes - no matter what you call it, a tear trough deformity is one of the earliest and most striking signs of ageing. Here’s how you can treat it
Everyone wants to delay premature ageing as much as possible, but there’s very little awareness of its symptoms and treatment methods. The under-eye area is the first to fall prey to ageing, stress, and unhealthy lifestyles. The tear trough area - space between the lower eyelid and upper cheek - starts to lose weight making you look tired and aged before time. The thinning skin makes the under-eye area look puffy and the shadows created by the hollowness start to resemble dark circles. This tear-trough deformity is what many refer to as sunken eyes or under-eye hollows. Other names include tear trough hollows, deepened upper eyelid sulcus and skeletonised eyes. Although a tear trough deformity is not a fatal flaw, it can affect your overall aesthetics and create a gloomy first impression. Fortunately, there’s a lot of extensive research on the subject including non-surgical treatment methods to under-eye hollows. But before we jump into treatment options, let’s take a look at what under-eye hollows really mean and their potential causes. What Is Tear Trough Deformity? A tear trough deformity occurs when you lose the fatty tissue in the facial area between the lower eyelid and the upper cheek. This gives a hollowed-out look to the eyes with sagging skin under the lower eyelid.
Depending on whether or not they have under-eye bags, doctors classify the tear trough deformity into three groups:
Depending on whether or not they have under-eye bags, doctors classify the tear trough deformity into three groups:
- Class I: Patients who have excessive skin on the lower eyelid, but no bulging orbital fat in the tear trough area
- Class II: Patients who don’t have excessive skin on the lower eyelid, but mild to moderate orbital fat bulging
- Class III: Patients who have both excessive skin on the lower eyelid skin as well as severe orbital fat bulging
- Dehydration caused by excess consumption of coffee, soda and pre-packaged drinks
- Deficiencies of vitamin C, vitamin K, and iron
- Poor sleep quality or insomnia
- Loss of collagen caused by ageing
- Dramatic weight loss
- Smoking
- Inflammation in the tiny blood vessels below the eyes or blocked nasal passages due to allergies
- Sinus infections
- Injury
- Dermal fillers, require an injection of hyaluronic acid into under-eye tissue
- Surgical treatment in the case of eye fractures
- Antibiotics for sinus infections
- Antihistamines and eye drops for allergies
- Lower filler volume injected into eye tissue
- Reduced unevenness in the under-eye hollows
- Lightening the under-eye dark circles
- The treatment procedure has little or no downtime
- Avoid using make-up or other skincare products for at least the first four hours post-treatment
- Avoid drinking alcoholic beverages for two days
- Avoid saunas, sun beds, and tanning treatments for two weeks
- Avoid exposure of skin to extremely cold temperatures
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