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Scot Sullivan, Portland Oregon -- fixed my dry eyes!

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  • Scot Sullivan, Portland Oregon -- fixed my dry eyes!

    Scot Sullivan first cauterized my lower tear drains, cautioning me that with a couple of other common problems he noted in my eyes, it was unlikely to resolve my dry eye problem.

    The other two problems, which no other ophthalmologist had noted, were excess conjunctiva and a very subtle movement of the inner lower eyelids away from the eye when I blinked.

    After the cauterization, my very dry eyes improved by perhaps 25% to 30%, so we went ahead with the minor surgeries to correct the other two problems. (Outpatient, local anesthesia with a bit of oral pre-meds -- fairly easy, although the recovery period was several weeks and was quite uncomfortable.)

    My eyes no longer seem to be dry at all, even though I do a lot of computer work and had a very long-standing problem. I don't use eye drops now. I do still use wrap-around sunglasses outdoors (everybody should protect from UV anyhow).

    The redness is greatly reduced. I'm about 5 weeks past surgery, and Sullivan told me a few days ago that I could expect a bit more improvement over the next month or two.

    Sullivan is an oculoplastic surgeon. He's also a former medical school professor (University of Oklahoma) of that subject. Most of his practice, according to his assistant, is treating things like excessive tearing and very dry eye.

    He's a laid-back, casual sort, and I found him and his office staff easy to deal with. Although getting an initial appointment took a while, after that it was easy to get appointments and even be seen on very short notice when problems or questions arose.

  • #2
    Re: Conjunctivochalasis (CCh)

    I was very interested in your eye problems and decided I wanted to see Dr. Sullivan myself (my appointment isn't until late Sept).

    In the meantime, I am reading about conjunctivochalasis (CCh) or excess conjunctiva. One of the things I read was that punctal occlusion makes symptoms worse (see for eg http://www.osref.org/media/video/Con...EV%2008-09.pdf).

    So, I'm wondering why he did cautery prior to the procedure to fix CCh?

    Thanks for any info.

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    • #3
      How much?

      thank you so much for posting this recommendation! I live in Portland myself and have been trying to find a doctor who really understands dry eye and doesn't just give me more drops and shrug, as if there are more serious problems that they have to worry about. I'd like to go see Dr. Sullivan but I don't have insurance and I'm not sure I can afford it. How do his fees compare to those of a regular ophthalmologist?

      spmcc - I'm very curious about how your experience was - was it as successful for you as it was for Gracie?

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      • #4
        Scot Sullivan is NOT a dry eye ophthalmologist. He is an oculoplastic ophthalmologist. In other words, he performs surgery on the eyes (socket, lids, conjunctiva... but not refractive surgery).

        As for cost, I think he charged me $75 for a consult. That was in Sept 2010. He recommended a surgery but I never had anything done by Dr. Sullivan.

        If you are looking for a dry eye ophthalmologist and/or cornea specialist in Portland, I would post a question to the board. I live in BC so I don't know about your area.

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        • #5
          So would I only go to see him if I already know I'll need surgery? Basically what I'm looking for is someone who's a specialist and not just guessing. Would he be able to make recommendations for non-surgical treatment?

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          • #6
            IMO, when it comes to dry eye, every doctor is guessing. No one can guarantee a thing.

            You should call Dr. Sullivan's office to get answers to your questions: http://www.portlandoculoplastics.com/bio.html

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