Douglas Cilia Forceps — Distichiasis Pattern
The Douglas cilia forceps is the variant designed for distichiasis — the rare congenital or acquired condition where a second row of eyelashes grows from the meibomian glands rather than the normal lash line, producing inward-directed lashes that abrade the cornea. The Douglas forceps’s finer tip and slightly angled jaw engage these aberrant lashes at the meibomian-orifice depth where they emerge.
The distichiasis pathology
Distichiasis can be hereditary (lymphoedema-distichiasis syndrome) or acquired (chronic blepharitis, ocular cicatricial pemphigoid). The aberrant lashes typically emerge from the meibomian gland orifices on the inner aspect of the lid margin and abrade the cornea more aggressively than typical trichiasis. Treatment includes surgical correction (lid-margin resection, electrolysis, cryotherapy) and ongoing epilation of regenerating aberrant lashes. The Douglas forceps supports the epilation maintenance after definitive treatment.
The lymphoedema-distichiasis syndrome
This rare hereditary condition (caused by FOXC2 gene mutations) presents with congenital distichiasis plus late-onset lower-extremity lymphoedema. Affected individuals need lifelong distichiasis management. The Douglas forceps is a long-term-care instrument in this population.





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