Post-Botox Ptosis (Eyelid Drop): How to Fix It
What is ptosis?
Ptosis is a drop of the upper eyelid or brow. After Botox it usually appears 3–14 days post-treatment.
Causes
- Toxin diffusion to the levator palpebrae muscle → eyelid drop.
- Excessive frontalis weakening → brow + eyelid drop together.
Anatomy-aware dosing minimises risk; small presentations occur in 1–3 % of cases.
Symptoms
- Unilateral or bilateral eyelid drop
- "Tired" expression
- Asymmetric gaze
- Upper-field visual narrowing (advanced cases)
Management
- Wait + follow-up — usually resolves in 2–6 weeks.
- Oxymetazoline 0.025 % drops — daily, lifts ~1–2 mm via Müller's muscle.
- Compensatory injection — physician-only.
- Apraclonidine drops — same mechanism, prescription only.
Prevention
Anatomy-aware planning, balanced glabella + forehead dosing, patient instructions (no flat lying for 4 h, no massage / rubbing for 24 h).
Bottom line
Ptosis is rare, transient, and manageable. Never attempt "correction" outside physician follow-up.
References
- Carruthers J, et al. — Adverse event consensus on neurotoxin
- Liu A, Carruthers A — Eyelid ptosis after Botox: management
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