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Silicone Sheeting for Facial Soft Tissue Lipoatrophy Augmentation

Silicone sheeting is most commonly used as an external scar treatment but its less known as an implant material for facial soft tissue augmentation. This is a concept that has been explored historically but is rarely used today in a pure sheet form. Silicone Sheeting as an Implant Thin sheets of medical-grade silicone can be Read More…

Medpor Jaw Angle Implant Removal; Unique Considerations and Technical Stratagies

Medpor jaw angle implant removal is one of the more technically demanding explant procedures because of thick soft tissue coverage, strong tissue ingrowth, and proximity to the masseter muscle and the facial artery.. It’s very different from silicone angle implant removal and often behaves like a deep subperiosteal dissection with partial reconstruction. Here’s how it’s Read More…

Challenges in Medpor Facial Implant Removals

Medpor (porous polyethylene) facial implants are designed to integrate with surrounding tissue, which is great for stability—but that same feature makes removal significantly more difficult than with smooth implants (like silicone). Here are the main challenges surgeons face: 1. Tissue Ingrowth (Primary Issue) Medpor is porous, allowing fibrovascular tissue to grow into it. Over time, Read More…

Comparing Medpor vs Silicone Jaw Angle Implant Removals

Jaw angle implant removal: Medpor vs silicone Factor Medpor jaw angle implant Silicone jaw angle implant Tissue reaction Fibrovascular ingrowth into pores Smooth capsule around implant Plane of removal Often obliterated Usually preserved Removal method Sharp dissection, often piecemeal Usually en bloc extraction Operative difficulty High Low to moderate Masseter involvement Common integration into masseter/periosteum Read More…

Comparing Medpor vs Silicone Jaw Angle Implant Removals

Jaw angle implant removal: Medpor vs silicone Factor Medpor jaw angle implant Silicone jaw angle implant Tissue reaction Fibrovascular ingrowth into pores Smooth capsule around implant Plane of removal Often obliterated Usually preserved Removal method Sharp dissection, often piecemeal Usually en bloc extraction Operative difficulty High Low to moderate Masseter involvement Common integration into masseter/periosteum Read More…

Medpor Jaw Angle Implant Removal – Unique Considerations and Technical Stratagies

Medpor jaw angle implant removal is one of the more technically demanding explant procedures because of thick soft tissue coverage, strong tissue ingrowth, and proximity to the masseter muscle and the facial artery.. It’s very different from silicone angle implant removal and often behaves like a deep subperiosteal dissection with partial reconstruction. Here’s how it’s typically approached and what Read More…

Surgical Techniques to Safely Remove Medpor Facial Implants

Safe removal of Medpor implants is really about controlled dissection, preservation of vital structures, and managing the consequences of tissue ingrowth. Surgeons approach it more like a reconstructive exposure procedure than a simple explant. Here are the key techniques: 1. Meticulous Layer-by-Layer Sharp Dissection Primary principle: never “pull”—always cut the ingrowth Use: Fine scissors Scalpel (often #15 blade) Needle-tip cautery Read More…

Challenges in Medpor Facial Implant Removals

  Medpor (porous polyethylene) facial implants are designed to integrate with surrounding tissue, which is great for stability—but that same feature makes removal significantly more difficult than with smooth implants (like silicone). Here are the main challenges surgeons face: 1. Tissue Ingrowth (Primary Issue) Medpor is porous, allowing fibrovascular tissue to grow into it. Over time, the Read More…

Comparing Custom vs Off-The-Shelf Infraorbital Implants

Standard off-the shelf (OTS) implants exist for just about every facial area below the brow bones. This is true for the infraorbital area of the upper midface as well with the tear trough implant. It is an implant that was originally made to treat a limited or the entire infraorbital rim bone. How does this Read More…

Male vs Female Custom MIdface Implant Strategies

Male and female midface implant strategies differ less by implant type and more by shape, vector, and projection philosophy. The goal is to reinforce sex-specific skeletal cues rather than simply “add volume.” Core Aesthetic Differences Feature Male Strategy Female Strategy Dominant cue Structure & angularity Soft contour & curvature Projection emphasis Lateral / horizontal Anterior Read More…

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