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Injectable Rhinoplasty – What It Can and Cannot Do

Getting a change in your nose without surgery seems impossible. But yet there are some nose imperfections that can be corrected without resorting to surgery. Some have referred to these as a Non-Surgical Rhinoplasty or a Surgery Free Nose Job. Personally I don’t like these terms as they imply one can have a major changes Read More…

Rhinoplasty – The Influence of Anatomy on Nose Shape

  Rhinoplasty continues to be a popular facial procedure and is one operation that is almost synonymous with plastic surgery. The central position of the nose on the face makes the need for any rhinoplasty surgery to be very precise. Good results in rhinoplasty are largely dependent upon a detailed understanding of the anatomy of Read More…

Rhinoplasty Correction of Nostril Stenosis

  The nostril, although often overlooked, plays very important aesthetic and functional roles in the nose. Beside being the obvious and only inlet for airway passage through the nose, its shape and opening help form the tip of the nose in both height and width. While nostril morphologies are as variable as the rest of Read More…

The Challenges of Adult Cleft Rhinoplasty

  Rhinoplasty persists as one of the most challenging plastic surgery procedures. Through one’s career, it is an ebb and flow of time periods where you think you have it all figured out followed by other periods where you have some complications and disappointing outcomes. When it comes to the congenital nasal deformity, such as Read More…

Shortening the Long Nose with Rhinoplasty

  One of the potential complaints of rhinoplasty patients is that their nose is too long. This should be differentiated from someone who feels that their nose is too big. While big may mean long when it comes to the nose, most of the time patients use the term big in reference to the size Read More…

Rhinoplasty and the Risk of Revisional Surgery

  Rhinoplasty remains a very popular and frequently performed plastic surgery procedure. While rhinoplasty is commonly a highly successful operation, it is like any surgery with its own potential risks and complications. The use of open rhinoplasty and cartilage grafting support techniques has lessened the historic incidence of complications from this surgery. (due to the Read More…

Reconstruction of the Traumatic Saddle Nose Deformity

  The nose is one of the most frequently injured parts of the face due to its prominent location. While low-energy trauma (e.g., fisticuffs) accounts for the largest percent of nasal injuries which are commonly non-displaced or displaced bone fractures, higher energy impacts cause more complex and significant nasal derangements. Vehicular accidents are one such Read More…

Rib Grafting in Rhinoplasty for Congenital Nasal Deformities

Many congenital or facial birth defects result in associated deformities of both the internal and external parts of the nose. Often times these are some of the most difficult nose problems to deal with in rhinoplasty surgery. The most common congenital nose deformity is that of cleft lip and palate with the bilateral cleft being Read More…

Shortening the Long Nose (Reduction Rhinoplasty)

Rhinoplasty surgery is capable of making a number of different changes to the shape of the nose. One of these potential changes is in the length of the nose. A nose’s length is measured from a point between the eyebrows at the top of the nose (an anthropometric point known as rhinion) down the bridge Read More…

Rhinoplasty for Wide Noses

  Some noses show their most undesirable features from the frontal view from which one can see it the most. One of these aesthetic nasal deformities is the nose that is too wide or too fat. This ‘fatness’ could be isolated to just that the nasal tip being too wide or too round (bulbous) or Read More…

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