Extended Temporal Implants

Dr. Eppley, I am looking for temporal implants due to significant thinning of my face with age and weight loss. I would also be interested in possible fat transfer or other procedures to fill my cheeks in some. Would like to consult on what my options are. Here is one old photo of me 30 years ago, I don’t ever expect to look that young again, but I would like my face to be plump or full looking again like it used to be. I’ve lost a lot of weight and my face now looks sunken and sickly. Please help me. I am embarrassed by my appearance.

A: Thank you for sending your pictures. You have very classic panfacial soft tissue volume loss which is very common in significant weight loss particularly in an older person. It affects some individuals more so than others. This is most manifest in your temporal region where it has turned into a complete concavity from the zygomatic arch all the way up to the anterior temporal line on the forehead. It is seen less severely in the cheek area only because your naturally high cheek bones have preserved some of the volume. (there is no bone protecting the temple areas) For your temporal areas there is no question that an extended temporal implant is the preferred procedure as it will create a permanent volume solution to that problem. It requires an extended temporal implant as opposed to the standard one given that it needs to reach all the way up to the forehead. For the cheeks your options are submalar cheek implants or fat injections. Each one has their own merits. (fat is better at total area volume addition but its survival may not do well given your age and lack of natural fat in the area…an implant has assured permanent volume but only provides volume to one specific area) In facial volume lose cases like yours I will often combine submalar cheek implants with fat injections to get the best of what each has to offer.

Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana