Combined blepharoplasty primarily uses local anesthesia with sedation, intravenous sedation (twilight sleep), or general anesthesia. While single eyelid corrections often use local numbing alone, combining upper and lower procedures typically requires deeper sedation to ensure patient comfort and precision during the 90-minute to 2-hour surgery.
- Local with sedation: Surgeons inject lidocaine for numbing while administering intravenous sedatives for deep relaxation.
- Intravenous sedation: Also called twilight sleep, this allows patients to remain responsive but feeling no pain.
- General anesthesia: Mandatory for those combining eyelid surgery with invasive procedures like full facelifts.
- Anxiety management: Surgeons often adjust sedation levels based on patient tolerance and specific medical history.
Bookimed Expert Insight: While many providers in Prague offer local anesthesia to lower costs, data from ABClinic Art & Beauty and Altoa shows that most international patients prefer twilight sedation for combined surgeries. This approach balances safety with total comfort, especially since a quad-eyelid procedure involves more tissue manipulation than a single area. Experienced surgeons like Dr. Patrik Richtr utilize these techniques to ensure a smooth recovery while maintaining the precision needed for facial symmetry.
Patient Consensus: Most patients report that twilight sedation is the ideal middle ground because it eliminates surgical anxiety without the heavy grogginess of general anesthesia. They frequently emphasize the importance of asking for a pre-operative discussion to clarify exactly which sedation level will be used for their specific procedure.