The lips, like the eyes and the nose, are central facial features that are also quite visible in facial expressions. Their size and shape determine their degree of attractiveness and contemporary pleasing lips are known to be full and have a well defined cupid’s bow. As the lips age numerous changes can take place including thinning of the vermilion, flattening of the cupid’s bow and vertical wrinkles of the upper lip. Naturally thin lips have no wrinkles but also lack vermilion height and have a flatter cupid’s bow.
Lip lift surgery has been around for decades but never achieved widespread clinical use due to scar concerns. With the introduction and widespread use of injectable fillers, lip lifts have almost been forgotten and seem like an ancient and out-of-date lip enhancing technique. While even though it is a method that will never replace injectable fillers, lip lifting techniques still have a very useful role in the properly selected patient. I would even argue that because of injectable fillers, lip lifts have been revived and are indicated that they ever were before. This is for the simple reason that injectable fillers can not solve all aesthetic lip problems.
Lift lift surgery involves two distinctly different techniques, the subnasal lip lift and the vermilion lip advancement. Both procedures lift the lips but change the upper lip differently and are thus used for different reasons.

Complications from subnasal lip lifts can occur from too much skin excision (never greater than one-third of the philtral length), cutting into or suturing the orbicularis muscle, or violation of the natural nose-lip base shape with the line of the scar.

Complications from vermilion advancements can occur from improper skin excisional patterns where the height of the cupid’s bow is too accentuated or exacting detail is not done in its execution, resulting in visible vermilion irregularities.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
