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Canthopexy

Canthopexy is often described as an “eye lift.” Clinically, it is a support procedure designed to stabilize the outer corner of the eyelid and protect eyelid shape.

In many patients, the issue is not simply skin. It is laxity of the lateral canthal tendon and lower lid support. Without addressing that support, lower eyelid surgery can create rounding, retraction, or an unnatural change in eye shape.

The aim is controlled refinement: improving stability and contour while keeping the eye natural and functional.

If you are considering canthopexy, an in-person assessment is the safest way to evaluate eyelid support and define whether this supportive step is appropriate in your anatomy.

What is Canthopexy?

Canthopexy is sometimes marketed as a way to “lift the eyes.” That description is incomplete and can create the wrong expectations. In surgical planning, canthopexy is primarily a stability operation. It reinforces the lateral canthus so the lower eyelid maintains position against the globe. This matters for both appearance and comfort.

Canthopexy is a surgical technique that tightens and supports the outer corner of the eyelids by reinforcing the lateral canthal tendon. It is often performed as an adjunct to lower blepharoplasty, midface procedures, or other periorbital surgery in patients who have lower lid laxity or are at risk for postoperative malposition. In selected cases, it can also be used to refine eyelid shape modestly, but its primary value is support.

The anatomical complexity begins with understanding eyelid mechanics. The lower eyelid is held by multiple structures, including the lateral canthal tendon, tarsal plate, and supportive ligaments. If the lateral support is weak, the eyelid can pull away from the eye, leading to rounding, scleral show, or retraction. These problems are not minor. They can be aesthetically obvious and can cause dryness and irritation. A canthopexy is a preventive and corrective step that respects this anatomy.

Patient selection is important. Some eyelids have strong support and do not need additional tightening. Others have subtle laxity that becomes apparent with the snap-back test or distraction test. Age, prior surgery, and natural anatomy influence risk. Individual tissue behavior also matters: some tissues stretch more with healing, which can reduce long-term stability if support is not addressed.

It is also important to clarify what canthopexy is not. It is not the same as canthoplasty, which is a more structural reconstruction of the lateral canthus. Canthopexy is typically less invasive and preserves more native anatomy. It is not a guarantee of a “cat eye” look, and it should not be used to force a dramatic shape change when anatomy cannot support it.

Limitations should be stated directly. Canthopexy can improve support and modestly refine contour, but it cannot override the underlying orbit shape or correct significant lid retraction without additional steps. In some anatomies, a more formal canthoplasty is required.

Recovery variability is real. Swelling, tenderness, and temporary tightness at the outer corner can occur. Early eye shape can look different and then settle as tissues relax. Realistic expectations and time are important.

Revision logic exists. Over-tightening can look unnatural. Under-correction can leave residual laxity. The best approach is conservative support that protects eyelid position rather than aggressive repositioning.

When properly indicated, canthopexy is a protective step that improves lower lid stability and helps periorbital surgery heal more naturally. The best outcomes come from precise assessment of lid laxity and individualized planning that prioritizes function and natural contour.

Canthopexy

Frequently Asked Questions

I recommend canthopexy when lower lid support is borderline or weak, especially in patients undergoing lower blepharoplasty or other periorbital surgery. It can reduce the risk of postoperative rounding, retraction, or scleral show. The indication is based on examination, not routine.

Canthopexy is a supportive tightening of the existing lateral canthal tendon. Canthoplasty is a more structural reconstruction that alters the canthal anatomy more directly. The correct choice depends on the degree of laxity and the desired correction.

It can create a modest refinement by stabilizing the outer corner, but it should not be planned as a dramatic shape-change procedure. The goal is natural support and controlled refinement.

It can reduce risk when laxity is present, but no surgeon should promise “zero risk.” The goal is to align technique with anatomy to improve predictability.

It is not always the right answer when laxity is significant enough to require canthoplasty, or when expectations require a dramatic “cat eye” look regardless of anatomy.

Swelling and tightness vary. The outer corner can feel firm early on. The final contour settles as tissues relax. Individual tissue behavior influences how quickly this stabilization occurs.

 

Risks include asymmetry, over-tightening, under-correction, scarring-related contour change, and temporary irritation or dryness. Conservative support reduces risk.

Yes, commonly. In selected patients, it is a supportive step that makes lower eyelid surgery safer and more stable.

Prior surgery can change scar planes and support structures. I assess existing laxity and tissue behavior carefully. In revision settings, support procedures are often more important.

Results can be durable, but tissues continue to age. A conservative canthopexy provides structural support that typically ages more naturally than aggressive repositioning.

Do your lower eyelids feel unsupported or look slightly rounded?

In some patients, subtle laxity at the outer corner changes how the lower lid sits, especially after swelling, fatigue, or previous surgery. The concern is often both aesthetic and comfort-related.

When properly indicated, canthopexy can provide controlled refinement by reinforcing lateral support while respecting eyelid mechanics and individual tissue behavior.

A Structured Surgical Journey

From your first evaluation to long-term follow-up, every step is structured to help you make a clear and confident decision.

The process begins with understanding your goals and current anatomy. Standardized photos allow an initial assessment to determine whether surgery is appropriate and which approach may be suitable.

A short online consultation with Dr. Mert Demirel is scheduled following the initial review. We discuss your expectations, possible options, and the limitations of each approach to ensure a clear and realistic understanding before any decision is made.

Based on your evaluation, a personalized surgical plan is created. The proposed approach, scope of the procedure, and clear pricing details are shared with you in a structured and transparent way.

Once you decide to proceed, your visit to Istanbul is carefully organized. Airport transfer, accommodation, and clinical scheduling are arranged, followed by an in-person evaluation and the surgical procedure.

The early recovery period is closely monitored with structured follow-ups.
Before your return, a final check is performed to ensure a safe and stable condition for travel.

The process does not end with the surgery.
Your recovery and results are followed over time, with guidance provided at each stage to support long-term stability.