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Designing brow bone implants is more than a subjective artistic endeavor as there are some objective measurements that can be used. One of the most useful is reference lines on the profile view as a way to turn what seems subjective (“does this look right?”) into something measurable and repeatable. These lines are applied to photos and CT-based simulations before deciding something like 4 mm vs 7 mm.

1. Brow–Cornea Relationship (most important)

How it’s drawn:

  • A vertical line is dropped from the most anterior point of the cornea (the front of the eyeball)
  • Then you compare where the brow ridge sits relative to that line

Ideal positioning:

  • Neutral / natural: brow sits slightly anterior the cornea (2-3mms)
  • Masculine: brow sits notoeable anterior (4–7mms sn front of the cornea
  • Excessive: brow sits well in front of the cornea (> 8 – 10mms)

This is one of the main “stop signs”:

  • If the planned implant pushes the brow way past the cornea it will likely look overbuilt

It is important to recognize that the most anterior brow position seen in profile is not that of the central glabella but of the medial brow bone area.

2. Brow–Nasal Bridge Alignment

How it’s drawn:

  • A line is drawn along the dorsum (bridge) of the nose
  • A second line is drawn down from the brow prominence which connects with the dorsal nasal line creating an angle
  • The brow-nasal dorsal angle will usually be 90 degrees or less.
  • Very low projecting or flat brows may have a 120 degree angle

What happens if you exceed it:

  • Overprojecting brows create a leaa than 90 degree angkle which nakes it look disconnected and heavy
  • Especially noticeable in profile

This is critical in patients with:

  • Smaller or flownasal bridges (limits how much brow you can add)

3. Forehead–Brow Bone Break Angle

This isn’t really two straight lines that intersect but a transition area from a straight line.

What is assessed:

  • The angle between:
    • Forehead slope
    • Brow prominence

Ideal:

  • Smooth transition with a visible but not abrupt “break”

Too much projection:

  • Creates a sharp ledge
  • Looks artificial or “shelf-like”

The slope of the forehead impacts the brow bone break. In more vertical foreheads excessive brow bone projection can male for an overly sharp  transition.

4. Glabella–Nasion Relationship

Landmarks:

  • Glabella = most prominent central forehead point between the medial brow prominences
  • Nasion = root of the nose

Ideal:

  • Smooth, continuous transition from brow-nasal root

Overprojection:

  • Brow juts out while nasion stays recessed,
    creates a step-off deformity look

Sometimes you may have to adjust BOTH brow and nasal radix for balance

5. Vertical Facial Thirds

Even though this isn’t a direct “brow line,” it matters:

  • Upper third (forehead height)
  • Middle third (brow ? base of nose)

Why it matters:

  • A very large brow projection in a short forehead looks exaggerated
  • Same projection in a taller forehead may look balanced

6. How these lines guide the actual millimeters

This is where it becomes practical:

Step-by-step:

Baseline measurement

Current brow vs cornea (e.g., 2 mm behind)

Target position

Decide desired relationship (e.g., 1 mm in front of cornea)

Calculate difference

That might mean adding ~3 mm projection

Cross-check with nasal line

If that same 3 mm pushes brow too far beyond nasal bridge ? reduce plan

Simulate on CT

Try 4 mm vs 6 mm vs 7 mm

See which one satisfies ALL reference lines

Example

Patient:

  • Brow sits 3 mm behind cornea
  • Wants a masculine result

Plan:

  • Target: ~1–2 mm in front of cornea
    Requires ~4–5 mm implant

BUT:

  • If 5 mm pushes brow beyond nasal line ? reduce to 4 mm

Key Insight

No single line determines the number.

Implant design must balance::

  • Brow–cornea (forward limit)
  • Brow–nasal (proportion check)
  • Forehead transition (aesthetic smoothness)

The final projection is the largest number that still satisfies all three without conflict.

Bottom Line

Reference lines act like guardrails:

  • Brow–cornea = prevents overprojection
  • Brow–nasal = keeps facial harmony
  • Forehead transition = ensures natural contour

The chosen projection is essentially:
“the maximum that looks right across all these checks”

Dr. Barry Eppley

Plastic Surgeon

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