Have you noticed one of your eyelids drooping lower than the other, making the eye appear smaller or partially closed? This condition is called ptosis, or blepharoptosis, and it is commonly referred to as a droopy eyelid. It can be present from birth in a child, or it can develop gradually in an adult because of aging, a nerve problem, or an underlying health condition.
The severity of ptosis is described by how much the lid is drooping. Mild ptosis means the lid is 1 to 2mm lower than normal and may not affect vision significantly. Moderate ptosis involves a drop of 2 to 3mm. Severe ptosis means the lid has dropped 4mm or more, often partially or completely covering the pupil.
Ptosis affects people of all ages in India. Congenital ptosis, which is present from birth or develops in the first year of life, is seen in both boys and girls. Acquired ptosis is more common in adults and tends to worsen gradually over time. Many older Indian adults live with mild to moderate ptosis that they have accepted as a natural part of aging, not realising it is a treatable condition.
The ptosis symptoms are usually visible, which is what first brings most patients or their parents to the doctor. However, beyond the obvious drooping of the eyelid, there are several other ptosis symptoms that families should be aware of, particularly in children.
Ptosis Symptoms to Watch For
Symptom | What it looks like | |
😴 | Drooping upper eyelid | One or both lids sit lower than normal, giving a heavy or sleepy appearance |
🔭 | Reduced visual field | When the lid covers the pupil, the upper portion of vision is partially blocked |
🔙 | Head tilting backward | Children often tilt their chin up to try to see under the drooping lid |
😤 | Raising the eyebrows | The person unconsciously lifts their eyebrows to compensate and raise the lid |
😵 | Eye strain and headaches | The constant effort of trying to see under the lid causes forehead and eye muscle fatigue |
😪 | Eyes appearing asymmetric | One eye looks noticeably smaller or different in shape compared to the other |
👁️ | Reduced vision in children | If one eye is covered, vision in that eye may not develop properly |
💧 | Increased tearing | The eye may water more because the lid is not in its correct position |
Please visit an eye specialist if:
There are several types of ptosis, classified by when it appears and what is causing the eyelid to droop. Understanding the types of ptosis helps the doctor identify the underlying cause, assess whether ptosis correction surgery is needed, and plan the right surgical approach.
Congenital Ptosis This type is present at birth or develops in the first year of life. It is caused by incomplete development of the levator muscle, which is either too weak or too short to raise the eyelid to the correct height. Congenital ptosis can affect one or both eyes. It is one of the most common eyelid conditions seen in paediatric eye clinics in India. Early assessment and ptosis correction surgery, when appropriate, are essential to prevent amblyopia and to support normal visual development.
Acquired Ptosis This type develops after birth, in childhood or more commonly in adulthood. There are several subtypes of acquired ptosis based on what is causing the drooping:
Subtype | What causes it | Who it typically affects |
Aponeurotic ptosis | The tendon connecting the levator muscle to the eyelid stretches or thins with age, or after eye surgery | Adults, most common form in older age |
Neurogenic ptosis | A problem with the nerve controlling the levator muscle, such as third nerve palsy or Horner syndrome | Any age, associated with neurological conditions |
Myogenic ptosis | A disease affecting the muscle itself, such as myasthenia gravis or chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) | Adults, associated with systemic conditions |
Mechanical ptosis | The eyelid is weighed down by a lump, tumour, swelling, or excess skin | Any age |
Traumatic ptosis | Injury to the eyelid or the nerves and muscles controlling it | Any age, follows an injury |
By Severity
Degree | How much the lid has dropped | Effect on vision |
Mild | 1 to 2mm | Minimal, cosmetic concern mainly |
Moderate | 2 to 3mm | May partially obstruct vision |
Severe | 4mm or more | Significantly blocks the pupil and vision |
The ptosis causes vary depending on the type and age of the person. All ptosis causes ultimately affect the mechanism that lifts the upper eyelid, whether through muscle weakness, nerve disruption, mechanical weight, or a structural problem. Identifying the specific ptosis causes in each patient is the first step in deciding the right approach to ptosis treatment and ptosis correction surgery.
Age-related changes (Aponeurotic ptosis) This is the most common cause of ptosis in adults in India. As a person ages, the thin tissue connecting the levator muscle to the eyelid gradually stretches and thins. The eyelid slowly droops lower over years. Many adults accept this as part of aging without realising it is a specific medical condition that can be corrected. Previous eye surgeries, including cataract surgery, can sometimes accelerate this process because the instruments used to hold the eye open during surgery stretch the eyelid.
Present from birth (Congenital ptosis) Congenital ptosis is caused by incomplete development of the levator muscle. The muscle may be underdeveloped, fibrotic, or not properly connected to the eyelid. The degree of droop can range from mild to severe. Congenital ptosis can occur on its own or alongside other ocular or systemic conditions.
Nerve-related causes (Neurogenic ptosis) Damage to the third cranial nerve, which controls the levator muscle, causes ptosis as part of a third nerve palsy. This is associated with conditions such as diabetes, stroke, an aneurysm, or a brain tumour. Horner syndrome is another neurogenic cause, where damage to the sympathetic nerve pathway causes mild ptosis alongside a small pupil. Neurogenic ptosis often develops suddenly, which is why new-onset ptosis in an adult always needs proper evaluation.
Muscle disease (Myogenic ptosis) Conditions that affect the muscles themselves can cause ptosis. Myasthenia gravis, where the connection between the nerve and muscle is disrupted by the immune system, causes variable ptosis that is often worse at the end of the day and after sustained use of the eyes. Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) is a condition affecting the eye muscles progressively.
Mechanical causes Anything that adds weight to the upper eyelid or physically holds it down can cause ptosis. This includes a large chalazion or stye, significant eyelid swelling, a tumour or cyst on the eyelid, or excessive drooping skin (dermatochalasis) in older adults.
Injury to the eyelid Trauma to the eyelid area, including cuts, blunt injuries, and complications from certain cosmetic treatments, can damage the levator muscle or its nerve supply, causing ptosis.
Diagnosing ptosis involves a detailed clinical examination of the eyelid and surrounding structures. The doctor needs to confirm the presence and degree of ptosis, identify the underlying cause, and assess whether vision or visual development is affected. All of this information feeds into the decision about whether ptosis correction surgery is needed and how to approach it.
Test | What it measures |
Margin reflex distance (MRD) | The distance between the pupil centre and the upper lid margin when looking straight ahead. This quantifies how much the lid is drooping. |
Levator function measurement | How much the eyelid moves from looking down to looking up. Good levator function (12mm or more) indicates the muscle is working. Poor function (less than 4mm) means the muscle is very weak. |
Skin fold height | The height of the upper eyelid skin fold, which helps plan the surgical incision in ptosis correction surgery. |
Visual acuity and visual field | Assesses whether ptosis is blocking vision in adults or affecting visual development in children. |
Pupil assessment | Checks for signs of Horner syndrome or third nerve palsy that would indicate a neurological cause. |
Cover test and ocular motility | Rules out strabismus associated with ptosis, particularly in children. |
Systemic and neurological assessment | Blood tests, imaging, or neurological evaluation when a medical cause is suspected. |
Ptosis treatment depends on the type, the severity, the underlying cause, and the age of the patient. Not all ptosis requires surgery. Mild ptosis in adults that is stable and not causing any visual or functional problem may simply need monitoring. However, when ptosis is significant enough to affect vision, cause a compensatory head posture, or create a significant cosmetic concern, ptosis correction surgery is the most effective and lasting solution.
For ptosis in children where vision development is at risk, ptosis correction surgery is often done early in life, even in infancy, to give the strongest chance of normal visual development.
In children with ptosis, the most important concern is not the appearance of the drooping eyelid but the risk of amblyopia, more commonly known as a lazy eye. During the first seven to eight years of life, the visual system is actively developing. For this development to proceed normally, both eyes need to receive clear, unobstructed visual input.
When ptosis covers or significantly narrows the visual axis of one eye during this critical period, the brain receives a blurred or reduced image from that eye. Over time, the brain begins to suppress and ignore the signals from the affected eye, and the vision in that eye fails to develop fully. Once this process is established and the critical period has passed, recovering that lost vision becomes very difficult even with ptosis correction surgery.
This is why a child born with severe ptosis, where the lid covers the pupil, may need ptosis correction surgery within the first few months of life. Even a child with moderate ptosis needs close monitoring, patching if amblyopia is developing, and timely ptosis correction surgery before the visual window closes.
Parents who notice that their infant or young child’s eyelid appears drooped, or that the child is tilting their head up habitually, should seek a paediatric eye specialist assessment promptly.
In adults, the most frequently seen form of ptosis in Indian eye clinics is aponeurotic ptosis, where the connective tissue attachment between the levator muscle and the eyelid gradually stretches or thins. This is a natural consequence of aging and is accelerated by a history of eye surgery, prolonged contact lens wear, or eye rubbing.
Many adults with aponeurotic ptosis do not seek ptosis treatment because they assume it is simply part of getting older and there is nothing that can be done. This is not the case. Aponeurotic ptosis correction surgery, where the stretched attachment is tightened through a precise eyelid skin crease incision, gives very natural and satisfying results.
The surgery is typically done under local anaesthesia as a day procedure, meaning no hospital admission is required. Recovery is comfortable for most patients. Because aponeurotic ptosis is caused by the same process in both eyelids, even if only one eye is noticeably drooping at the time of surgery, the other eye may need ptosis correction surgery at a later date.
Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune condition that affects the connection between nerves and muscles throughout the body, but the eyelids and eye muscles are often among the first areas affected. Ptosis in myasthenia gravis has a distinctive pattern: it tends to be worse after sustained eye use or later in the day, and it may fluctuate from day to day. Sometimes both eyelids are affected, and double vision may accompany the ptosis.
If an adult develops ptosis that seems to vary with fatigue, or if both eyelids are involved, or if there is associated double vision, a blood test for acetylcholine receptor antibodies is done to check for myasthenia gravis before any ptosis correction surgery is planned. Treating the underlying myasthenia can significantly improve ptosis. Ptosis correction surgery may still be considered for residual drooping once the medical condition is controlled.
For many patients and families, the idea of surgery near the eye is daunting. Here is a plain explanation of what ptosis correction surgery involves.
At Vasan Eye Care, ptosis is one of the conditions managed by our oculoplastic surgery team, specialists in conditions affecting the eyelids, orbit, and surrounding structures. Whether you are bringing in a child with congenital ptosis or an adult with gradual drooping that has developed over the years, our team takes the time to assess the specific type of ptosis, its severity, and its impact on vision before recommending ptosis correction surgery or other management.
We understand that ptosis correction surgery is a decision that involves trust, and we provide honest, clear guidance on what the procedure involves, what results are realistic, and what the ptosis surgery cost will be, before any decision is made.
With 150+ centres across India, staffed by 500+ eye care specialists as part of ASG Enterprises, India’s largest eye care network, specialist ptosis care is accessible wherever you are.
| Word or phrase | What it means in simple terms |
| Ptosis | Drooping of the upper eyelid |
| Blepharoptosis | The medical term for ptosis |
| Droopy eyelid | The common description for ptosis |
| Levator muscle | The muscle inside the upper eyelid responsible for lifting it |
| Aponeurosis | The connective tissue attachment between the levator muscle and the eyelid |
| Congenital ptosis | Ptosis present from birth due to underdeveloped levator muscle |
| Aponeurotic ptosis | Ptosis in adults from stretching or thinning of the levator attachment |
| Neurogenic ptosis | Ptosis caused by nerve damage (third nerve palsy, Horner syndrome) |
| Myogenic ptosis | Ptosis caused by a muscle disease such as myasthenia gravis |
| Amblyopia | Lazy eye, reduced vision in the eye covered by the drooping lid |
| Levator resection | Ptosis correction surgery where the levator muscle is shortened |
| Frontalis sling | Ptosis correction surgery where a sling connects the eyelid to the forehead muscle |
| MRD (Margin Reflex Distance) | A measurement used to quantify how much the eyelid is drooping |
For appointments, call 1800 571 2222 or visit your nearest Vasan Eye Care centre.
It depends on the type. Aponeurotic ptosis, the most common form in adults caused by age-related stretching of the lid attachment, does tend to worsen slowly over years. Congenital ptosis typically remains stable over time, though it may look more noticeable as the child grows. Ptosis caused by myasthenia gravis fluctuates, often worse by the evening or after eye use. Neurogenic ptosis may remain stable once the underlying neurological condition stabilises. Any ptosis that is progressing noticeably, or that is causing visual problems, should be assessed by a specialist to decide whether ptosis correction surgery is appropriate.
For most types of ptosis, surgery is the only permanent solution. However, there are some situations where non-surgical approaches help. Treating the underlying medical cause, such as using medication for myasthenia gravis, can improve ptosis significantly. Lubricating eye drops help when incomplete lid closure causes a dry eye surface. Ptosis crutches, which are small supports that can be attached to glasses to hold the lid up, are sometimes used temporarily when surgery is not immediately possible. Some clinicians use onabotulinumtoxin A (Botox) injections in a small group of patients with Horner syndrome or lid retraction on the other side, but this does not directly treat the ptosis muscle. For most patients wanting a lasting and functional correction, ptosis correction surgery remains the appropriate path.
In a small number of situations, yes. Ptosis caused by a stye, significant eyelid swelling, or a temporary nerve irritation may resolve once the underlying cause settles. Ptosis following a Botox injection to the forehead or brow typically resolves within weeks to months as the Botox effect wears off. However, structural ptosis caused by a weak or stretched levator muscle, or by congenital underdevelopment of the levator, does not resolve on its own. In these cases, ptosis correction surgery is needed for a lasting improvement.
Prolonged fatigue and lack of sleep can make the eyelids appear heavier and cause them to droop slightly, giving the appearance of ptosis. This is temporary and resolves with adequate rest. It is not the same as clinical ptosis, where there is a structural or neurological problem with the eyelid-lifting mechanism. However, if a person consistently notices that one eyelid droops more than the other even when well-rested, that is worth having evaluated by an eye specialist, as it may indicate true ptosis rather than simple tiredness.
The ptosis surgery cost in India varies depending on the type of procedure, whether one or both eyes are being treated, the hospital or eye centre chosen, and the city. Ptosis correction surgery in India is generally more affordable than in Western countries. At Vasan Eye Care, our team will provide a clear explanation of the ptosis surgery cost based on the examination findings and the specific procedure recommended, so there are no surprises. Please contact your nearest Vasan Eye Care centre for a consultation and cost estimate.
Ptosis correction surgery is a well-established, routinely performed procedure with a strong safety record. Serious complications are uncommon when performed by an experienced oculoplastic surgeon. The most common issue after ptosis surgery is undercorrection or overcorrection of the eyelid height, which may require a secondary adjustment procedure. Temporary dry eye symptoms are common in the first few weeks as the eyelid adjusts to its new position. Infection and wound complications are rare. The doctor will discuss all potential risks during the pre-operative consultation.
Most patients go home the same day after ptosis correction surgery. Initial swelling and bruising around the eye are expected and settle within one to two weeks. During this time, antibiotic and lubricating eye drops are prescribed. The eyelid height and symmetry continue to settle and refine over the following six to twelve weeks. Patients can usually return to light activities within a week, with most people feeling comfortable enough to go out in public within two weeks. Final results are assessed at around three months.
In some cases, yes. When ptosis affects only one eye, correcting that eyelid can sometimes cause the opposite eyelid to drop slightly, a phenomenon known as Hering’s Law. During the pre-operative assessment, the doctor evaluates whether this is likely and discusses whether both eyelids should be addressed in the same ptosis correction surgery to ensure the most symmetrical result.
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For appointments, call 1800 571 2222 or visit your nearest Vasan Eye Care centre.