Is it possible to change the angle of the eye from submerged wire to full incision?

  Patient: Description (onset time, main symptoms, hospital visited, etc.): Hello Dr. Li, I’m here to introduce my eye condition: I buried a line eight years ago, and now I have almost double eyelids, so I feel that my eyelids have become loose, so I want to change to minimally invasive or full incision; I have elevated head lines, and I’ve read many postings, so I don’t know if there is upper eyelid muscle weakness; my inner canthus is quite serious, so I want to do inner canthus correction I would like to have my canthus corrected. I also want to ask what the difference is between minimally invasive and full cut, after reading your consultation replies it seems that you generally disagree with minimally invasive Oh 埋线, 內双 Repair, minimally invasive or full cut, endophthalmos correction, epicanthalmos I wonder if it needs correction?  The best way to get the most out of your treatment is to have a face-to-face checkup and feel that you can do an open double eyelid with an open inner corner.  Minimally invasive is actually a simplification of incision, it can’t remove skin, although it can remove fat and muscle, but it is not easy to go evenly, it is not convenient to stop bleeding, sometimes it is more swollen after surgery, for those who need to remove skin, fat and muscle often appear uneven, not as wide, easy to become narrow and many other bad effects after surgery, so this part of the population is best to use the full cut method; and for those who do not need to remove skin, fat and muscle. The best option is to do a buried line, which is less invasive than minimally invasive; so minimally invasive is not much use, and I think in most cases it is recommended because the doctor is not sure about the sutures (worrying about them falling out and the lid disappearing), doesn’t want to do the incision, or when the salon is putting on a show.