Your Questions
Your Questions
Q: Dr. Eppley, I would like to discuss the options for a chin revision. I had a chin augmentation in January 2021 and the removal of the implant in May of 2021. Since then my facial structure has changed significantly, which the lower part of my face becoming wide along with issues regarding my smile. Therefore I’m looking to see if liposuction/mini facelift are options to correct this issue? Look forward to hearing from you! Thanks so much!
A:Thank you for sending your pictures. What has happened is rather classic from your chin implant surgery. Placement of the chin implant necessitated release of the overlying soft tissues. Once the implant was removed the soft tissues are never going to go back exactly to what they were before. Thus you went from a v-shaped chin to now a wider/flatter chin shape. There is not any way to directly manipulate the soft tissues of the chin to regain that appearance as it is a direct result of degloving of the soft tissues. While there may be some aesthetic benefits in your case to the options you mentioned (submental liposuction and a jowl-tuckup procedure (aka lower limited facelift) their effects would be to improve everything around the chin but I would not assume that will bring back completely the previous chin shape. It will definitely help, however, improve the wider lower facial shape.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, But I saw you comment on a question forum about my exact issue so what I think I have is chin ptosis! For years I have been getting filler in my chin to correct it and was considering a sliding genioplasty or implant but what I realized I really want is for the fleshy pad on top of my chin to be shortened, it is too long and extends even further when I smile and talk. I am in the process of trying to make my face “smaller” by reducing the fleshiness in the lower half of my face. My chin has really been standing out to me, I believe the filler is migrating too even though I’m adamant with the injectors to not place it anywhere in the lower part of my chin, I only get the filler to project it forward and fill in the hollow crease right below my lip which causes a shadow that really bothers me. I got x rays done at a dentist so I’m attaching that since it’s probably helpful! Please excuse the purple Halloween costume but that photo my chin looks crazy so I thought it would be a good example. Any way, depending on the price of this procedure I may make an appointment to travel to IN sooner than later and maybe combine it with one of the implants? Please let me know what you think.
A:You have a natural large soft tissue chin pad to bone ratio which can clearly be seen on your lateral cephalometric x-ray. This becomes more apparent when you smile as it pulls down creating hyperdynamic chin ptosis. You have correctly surmised that a soft tissue chin pad reduction is the correct procedure to improve it.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, thank you for your time. I know you are busy. I am an avid reader of your online content, blog, and responses on forums. I have a question I hope you can answer, as I feel you are the best expert on this.
I have long history of many intra-oral chin implant surgeries, which unfortunately resulted in me having lower lip incompetence. I then underwent a mentalis resuspension using a large PEEK implant with holes to accept sutures for the mentalis, as well as holes made in the alveolar bone to re-attach the mentalis. This resulted in shortening of the vestibular sulcus and restoration of my original lip height and labial competence.
However, my mentolabial groove is no longer as deep/pronounced as it used to be. I have read that this groove is supposedly an anatomically fixed site that cannot be made more shallow unless through fillers, fat grafting, or even implants, but I insist that I used to have a deep groove, and it is now shallow/less noticeable.
Oddly enough, I liked having the deep groove, as I felt it made my chin look more pronounced as a man. Everything I read online is about patients and surgeons attempting to minimize this groove and prevent it from becoming too deep, but I *want* the deeper groove I used to have.
My questions are:
1) Is it possible that intra-oral procedures and mentalis resuspension can inadvertently make the mentolabial groove more shallow.
2) Is it possible to make this groove *deeper*, perhaps through liposuction, or further vestibuloplasty.
I appreciate your time. I know you are busy. I am thankful for your time.
A: Given what you have been through to get to this point, I would accept the tradeoff of a less shallow labiomental sulcus for the lower lip competence improvement., Trying to make it deep again risks a return of some of the very improvements you have now obtained.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I am a 27 year old trans woman and I am very interested in having rib removal surgery for waistline narrowing. I have a few questions:
1. How long must patients stay in town before flying home?
2. Is it possible for me to have this procedure on my own without a support person? Does the clinic offer any nurses for aftercare? If not, can you recommend any locally?
Thank you so much for your help.
A: Thank you for your inquiry in regards to rib removal surgery. In answer to your logistical questions:
1) Most rib removal patients return home 3 to 5 days after the surgery.
2) It is very common that patients come by themselves for this type of body contouring surgery. We have a nursing service that gets you back to the hotel the morning after surgery as well as can provide some intermittent support for a few days after the surgery.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have a broken zygomatic arch that was not repaired in time which has resulted in loss of facial symmetry. What can I do to correct it now?
A:To determine the best corrective approach for a displaced zygomatic arch fracture a 3D Ct scan is needed so there is a clear understanding of the actual bone position and how best to repair it. In some situations, unless the infractured bone segment is impinging on the masseter muscle (causing pain), a camouflage approach (leave the bone where it is) may be used for facial contour restoration.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have a question regarding the combination of standard chin and jaw angle implants.
How do they connect? I´m aware that they are 3 separate implants, which are not connected by screws or anything like that. But will there be visible gaps between them if you wrap the skin around them very tihghtly?
How can it look like 1 uninterrupted jawline instead of 3 “hills”? Or is another technique like wrap around custom jawline implants better regarding that concern?
A: The wrap around jawline implant is the only jaw augmentation method that makes for a smooth connection between the chin and jaw angles. That is one of its many features/advantages.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Can I get an advancement sliding genioplasty if my chin is not recessed? Like its perfectly lined straight with my lips but i want to advance it for an even more forward grown look. Thank you.
A: A sliding genioplasty can be done just as easily/effectively in a chin with normal projection as in the recessed chin.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Hi, could you tell me all of the risks involved with your post-genioplasty procedure of intra-oral release and fat graft? Also how long does recovery generally take? And can this procedure help to raise the lower lip a bit to cover the lower incisors more / reduce lip incompetence?
Thank you!
A:The only real risk of post-genioplasy release and fat grafting is how well/effective it would be.
One of the goals of the procedure is to raise the lower lip a bit….the hardest post-genioplasty sequelae to improve long-term.
Recovery is much more rapid than the original sliding genioplasty,. being a week to 10 days at most.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Hello, I have had a Le Fort Osteotomy for sleep apnea in 2020, and am unhappy with my jaw appearance after (too narrow, undefined). I tried a jaw implant in 2021 but it became infected and had to be removed. I am wondering if a custom jaw implant would be an option for me?
Thank you
A: Almost always a custom wrap around jawline implant is the most effective approach for jaw augmentation after orthognathic surgery. I would need to see some pictures and do some computer imaging to see what type of changes is desired/possible.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Hello, I’m interested in clavicle shortening. However, I’m wondering if this would make my collarbone a lot less visible. I already have not really visible collarbones and I’m worried they will fully disappear.
A:Good question and actually the reverse of your concern, becoming more visible, is more likely to occur due to the application of the superior fixation plate.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I recently had custom peek jaw implants in Europe, they look great and have healed well. The only issue is that the right hand side implant was ever so slightly malpositioned, such that at the point of contact along the mandible (about half way between gonion and chin) the implant edge is raised maybe 1-2mm off the bone (such that I can feel (but not see) a little lump along the bone)
I know jaw implants are meant to last for life (correct me if this is not a correct asumption), but is that longevity at risk if the implant is slightly malpositioned? I’m worried that if I press hard on the notch at the end, if I press hard enough the implant will snap into the 1-2mm gap toward the bone and break or the screws will be pulled out or something (eg if i got punched in the face). Can I still expect the implant to last for life?
A:Even custom jaw implants can be malpositioned, most commonly at the jaw angle region. Such malpositions do not affect the longevity of the material. PEEK is a very strong plastic material that you can not bend or break.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have an initial video consultation scheduled with you already. My question is, can all the procedures I am wanting be performed on a single day? Tentatively, I am planning to get infraorbital-malar implants, nasal tip rhinoplasty, buccal lipectomy, and sliding genioplasty (bilateral where applicable). Of course, I won’t finalize plans for any specific procedure until I get your ultimate recommendation at the consultation, but, for scheduling purposes, I am wondering if it is possible to perform all of these in one operation. In particular, I would like to know whether it is safe to be under anesthesia for the duration of these procedures. Thanks, looking forward to speaking with you.
A: It is very common to perform many facial procedures at the same time. So the combination of IOM implants, tip rhinoplasty, buccal lipectomies and sliding genioplasty do not pose any medical risks or any undue physiologic stress on the patient through both the surgery and the healing process.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Hello, I had a chin burring procedure intraoral approach in November 2020 but when the swelling went down my chin was noticeably long and flatter, my main concern is that the tissues are now drooped and filler has made it less unsightly but still drooped and long, smiling makes it worse. I would like to discuss excision and tightening of the chin pad to help this issue, thank you!
A: Chin reduction by intraoral burring is always a poor treatment choice which creates exactly what you have…a flatter wider chin with soft tissue chin ptosis which is why it looks longer. Why surgeons continue to do this approach to chin reduction when this is an expected outcome is a mystery to me. It can now only be improved by a submental chin pad excision/tuck now.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have untreated plagiocephaly which has caused several asymmetrical features of my face and head And I’ve only started to notice as I got older.
The right side of my face is pushed forward and the left side is pushed back affecting my eyes, cheekbones, ears, jaw and head. The right side of my jaw appears smaller and higher up whereas my left side of my jaw appears larger and further down. My right side eye appears larger and positioned normally whereas my left eye is slightly slanted more and pushed further back making it noticeably asymmetrical. My right side cheekbone is pushed further out compared to my left. The left side of my head is pushed further back and sticks out noticeably looking at me from the front, whereas my right side doesn’t stick out but is flat at the back , my right ear is placed further forward compared to my left. How many of these problems would you be able to fix please and make me look as normal as possible I know if I was to get most of these asymmetrical features fixed it would be a long expensive process but I’m willing to fly over for however long it takes.
A: Every skull and facial shape abnormality that you have described is very typical in plagiocephaly. Potentially every one of them can be treated/improved to varying degrees. The first step is to establish a treatment plan for them based on your priorities. I would make a list of the most to least bothersome of these craniofacial features and then we will match that up with a 3D Craniofacial CT scan to create a surgical approach to your plagiocephaly concerns.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have had a testicular implant since 13. There is a large size disparity between my real testicle and the implant.
I am about to have a urologist insert a larger implant. In researching the Coloplast, the largest size is not even close.
What are my options?
A: The beet approach would be to have a custom ultrasoft silicone testicle implant made that matches the other side in size. Given your statement of ‘the largest size is not even close’ would indicate the need for a custom implant design approach. Since the largest saline testicle implant is 4.5ms and the largest silicone testicle implant is 5.0cms, the need for a custom testicle implant design is obvious.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I had a botched genioplasty and I am wondering if you could fix it? My doctor said I had to wait 6 months for a revision but 1) I really do not trust him to do the revision and 2) I have seen other people have revisions/reversals before 6 months. Thank you.
A: What type of bony movements were done in the sliding genioplasty and what concerns are there now? This will guide how you would revise your genioplasty. But it can be done anytime before 6 months as what matters is whether you have a clear idea as to the changes you want. The timing is not based on how well healed the bone is.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Hello, i want to know after a surgery like skull reshape how do you feel your head because I’ve had some surgeries and all the zones of the cut feels like electricity and numbness. It is the same for the head?
A: In my experience skull reshaping patients will experience some temporary scalp numbness which fairly quickly returns to normal in a month or two after the surgery.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Can The Plates and Screws and Hydroxyapatite Granules Be Removed After A LeFort I Osteotomy Surgery?
Q: Dr. Eppley ,I am writing to you because 3 years ago I had Lefort 1, BSSO and a cheekbone augmentation with hydroxyapatite granules.
Since this year, I have noticed the cheekbone (implant/granules) grew much larger, mainly on the left side. It has been getting bigger still and it protrudes much more from the side. Especially in the last 6 months, it seems like the “implant” is migrating upwards towards my eye; or a new bone layer is growing near and/or around my eye socket. My left eye is closing up as new bone grows, or hydroxyapatite moves underneath and on de outer corner of the eye as well.
Another issue is that my face, especially in my cheek area, has been swelling up slowly over the past year as well. On the upper jaw, the area where the plates and screws were placed, it feels sensitive and is more swollen. I believe this is due to an infection of either the plates or the implant.
Could there be new bone growing on and around the hydroxyapatite implant, years after placement?
Could this be the reason for the possible plate infection?
I am very worried about what is happening in my face, and I was hoping we could have a consultation about the removal or at least reducing of the hydroxyapatite implant and the plates and screws.”
A: The first place to start is to get a 3D CT scan of your face in which all metal hardware as well as the sites of HA implants can be seen. This will then provide a guide for surgical removal. There is no indication that you have any infection as this is not how infections present nor would they occur in such a delayed time period. This is all due to scar tissue buildup and how the body has responded to the HA granules.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, thank you for all your information about skull reshaping surgery that you provide which is very useful for us. I would like to know if it is possible to reduce the width of a human skull by reducing the thickness of the parietal bone by about 3 to 5 mm on each side of the skull knowing that the parietal bone has a thickness of 1.7 cm on average and if so, what are the risks.
A: A parietal bone skull reduction of 3 to 5 mms can be effectively achieved without significant risk…other than the aesthetic compromise of the fine scalp scar line (incision) required to perform it.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I had a sliding genioplasty to advance my chin 6mm forward 7 weeks ago. I know that I am still early in the healing phase but I hate my chin so far and I feel like it’s not so swollen anymore. It makes my face seems a lot longer and narrower. From a 3/4 view, it looks too pointy and doesn’t match my face. I know that with facial cosmetic procedures it can be hard for patients to accept their new faces but I feel like I won’t ever like this chin. I am thinking to reverse it (3-4mm backwards) but I would like to know when is the best time to get it done. Some surgeons say that it’s best done 6-8 weeks after the surgery or that I should get it done between 3 and 6 months while other doctors say that I should wait 6 months for the bone to heal. My surgeon said that a new surgery so early is too risky and that it could end with a bone necrosis. I am ready to wait a few months because I don’t want to take a hasty decision. When is the best time to get it done ? Is 4mm too much? I am 18 years old, I don’t want my skin to sag. Thank you
A: At 7 weeks out you can do it anytime now. The so called risk of bone necrosis is a non-factor in my opinion and experience. Just get it done as soon as you can at this point after surgery.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I am very interested in the procedure that I see you are an expert in, forehead augmentation with custom implants.
My question is the following, I have a very backward sloping forehead, and I want to increase considerably in volume that area, I have read that in the case that it is required and the patient wants something much more significant should be implemented an additional procedure (tissue augmentation, extension), I think that would be my case. I want to increase my forehead about 5 cm of volume approximately, with temporary extensions and completely cover the eyebrows.
Will it be possible to augment to that extent? Up to how many centimeters will it be possible?
I attach photos of what my forehead looks like and how I would like to have it.
Best regards, I look forward to your answer!
A: Thank you for your inquiry and sending your pictures. You have made two correct assumptions in regards to your forehead augmentation goals:
1) The desired amount of forehead augmentation is going to require a first stage scalp expansion and
2) When you add that much change in the inclination of the forehead the implant must, to look natural and blend in with the rest of the head shape, wrap around the sides (temporal regions) of the head. In essence this forehead implant design would really involve the entire front half of the skull.
You have made one incorrect assumption, that amount of forehead augmentation is profile is closer to 10 to 15mm of projection not the 50mm or 5 cms which you have stated.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, My head is flat on the back and underdeveloped on sagittal and frontal, and it’s been troubling me and cause I h me depression just being aware of it 24/7. I got a few questions about the procedure. 1. Is it bone cement you’ll be using for skull reshaping surgery, or silicone padding? 2. Is possible to go through one anesthesia and have three incisions and reshaping my forehead, back of my head and my sagittal area in one procedure? 3. I’m a trans women. Does skull reshaping surgery count as part of my Facial Feminization surgery, and if so could that be covered by insurance?
A: In answer to your skull augmentation questions:
1) Only a custom made solid silicone skull implant can create effective 3D skull augmentation changes.
2) Yes it is possible in a single surgery to reshape/augment numerous skull surface areas…provided the volumes being added do not exceed the stretch of the scalp to accommodate them. If the scalp’s ability to stretch is questionable or there is absolute certainty that it can’t, then a first stage scalp expansion procedure is needed.
3) We do not accept or process insurance.
4) To accurately provide the cost of #1 or #2 (one vs two stage skull augmentation) I would need to do some computer imaging on your pictures to determine what your precise skull augmentation objectives are.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Does the burring method, which, from what I gathered, removes the outer layer of the skull, result in a weaker, more vulnerable skull which can increase the risk of hurting one’s head and brain (cracking, piercing skull, etc)?
A: Removal of the outer layer of the skull as is done in skull reduction surgery does not make it more susceptible to injury due to the double layer cortical bone that comprises the full thickness of the skull.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have a question about your stance on the ability of infraorbital rim implants to marginally effect scleral show on the lower lids.
I’ve researched this topic quite a lot, and your name always pops up within discussions surrounding it. I’m a bit confused, though, as in some posts — whether it be on your blog or realself.com— you suggest that if orbital implants have enough vertical height, they can help drive up the eyelid slightly and reduce scleral show. However, it seems you also commonly suggest these days that any sort of vertical pushing from beneath is a flawed concept so far as changing lower eyelid position.
Is it the case that sometimes it can work and sometimes it doesn’t? Is it that when it does work, the effect is very marginal and so wouldn’t be very perceptible?
Interested in your insight on this topic. Many thanks!
A: CUSTOM infraorbital rim implants that saddle the rim and add vertical height can have a modest effect on reducing scleral show as there is a relationship between the bony infraorbital rim and the lower eyelid position. If a modest reduction in scleral show is all that is needed (1 to 2mms) then the implant alone may suffice. But in significan sclerla show with rounded lower eyelids and/or downturned outer eye corners, the implant will need to be supplemented with soft tissue management as well (spacer lower eyelid grafts and lateral canthoplasty) to have a very visible and sustained lower eyelid uplifting effect.
It is not a question of whether it sometimes works and sometimes doesn’t. You have to match the anatomic problem the patient has with the correct solution to treat it. All three techniques mentioned are tools to be used of which some lower eyelid reshaping needs only requires one while others requires all three.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I’m a MTF transgender. I wish to reduce my underbust measurement through modifying my rib cage. I just read a post here https://exploreplasticsurgery.com/case-study-transgender-rib-removal-surgery-body-contouring/?doing_wp_cron=1619818519.8208200931549072265625 and I realised it is possible to modify the ribs to reduce waist size. I’d like to ask if it is possible to modify the ribs to reduce my underbust size? Can I also achieve this goal through a corset?
A:The portion of the ribcage to which you refer (underbust) is the fixed portion of he ribcage over the bottom portion of the lungs which can not be surgically reduced. It is also a ribcage area that is unlikely to be modified by corseting due to the fixed nature of the ribs.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have an initial video consultation scheduled with you already. My question is, can all the procedures I am wanting be performed on a single day? Tentatively, I am planning to get infraorbital-malar implants, nasal tip rhinoplasty, buccal lipectomy, and sliding genioplasty (bilateral where applicable). Of course, I won’t finalize plans for any specific procedure until I get your ultimate recommendation at the consultation, but, for scheduling purposes, I am wondering if it is possible to perform all of these in one operation. In particular, I would like to know whether it is safe to be under anesthesia for the duration of these procedures. Thanks, looking forward to speaking with you.
A: It is very common to perform many facial procedures at the same time. So the combination of IOM implants, tip rhinoplasty, buccal lipectomies and sliding genioplasty do not pose any medical risks or any undue physiologic stress on the patient through both the surgery and the healing process.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I have a few of questions regarding infraorbital implants, which I am considering potentially having (I am right now trying to choose between fillers or implants) and would really appreciate some expertise help choosing.
My first question is, how long do they last, exactly?
I know they are said to be permanent, but is that figuratively or literally? For instance, would it be possible to actually have them your whole life, or would you have to change them eventually? Given that they are after all of silicone, and that you have to change silicone breast implants each ten years, I mean?
2) Would it be possible to insert them from the inside of the lower eyelid, or can they only be inserted from the outside?
3) Finally, I understand that they are attached to the bone with metal screws? Does that mean that if I am passing through the metal detector at an airport that the screws would make the alarm go off?
And in case I would ever for some reason need to do an MRI, how would that affect the screws? Would it pull them out?
A:In regards to your questions about infraorbital rim implants I can provide the following answers:
1) All forms of aesthetic craniofacial implants are of a solid composition so the materials are structurally stable. They can never degrade or breakdown resulting in the need for eventua replacement. Solid silicone facial implants should not be confused with gel-filled breast implants which do have a limited lifespan.
2) While smaller standard infraorbital rim implants can be placed through a transconjunctival approach (inner eyelid), larger custom infraorbital rim implants can not. How this may apply to you I do not yet know.
3) The ultra small titanium screws that I use for most infraorbital rim implants (the same size as the screws in a pair of eyeglasses) are not going to make any metal detector go off and are compatible with MRIs. (titanium is a non–ferrromagnetic metal)
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I’d just like to say that this case study is incredibly valuable and the results visually look excellent – very natural and impossible to detect that work was done. I think 15mm is ideal in that regard.
I have a question about the method of surgery. When you do clavicle reduction, you obviously have segments of bone that you remove. It is possible to then remove the bone marrow from these/clean it and then use them as exogenous bone grafts for other patients? Would there be any benefit to having an entire piece of bone like this filling the gap of an osteotomy during lengthening, as opposed to doing a sagittal split osteotomy?
Secondly, how do you ensure that the clavicles are lengthened in the correct plane when you pull them apart? ie laterally in line with the existing shape of the clavicle.
A: In answer to your questions:
1) While the clavicle has an inner cancellous space that is not bone marrow.
2) While a fibular bone graft can be used for clavicle lengthening that is going to have the patient recovering from two ‘broken’ shoulders as well as a ‘broken’ leg. That is going to make the recovery process extremely difficult. Not to mention a much longer time of limited arm motion given how long it takes a bone graft to heal vs an osteotomy.
3) When doing a sagittal split the alignment of the bone can be seen as the outer segment slides away from the inner segment.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, Good Morning! I have a general question. Is it possible to have a shoulder width reduction surgery and rib removal waist line reduction at the same time? Or do they have to be performed separately?
A:It is not uncommon, in the properly qualified patient, to do shoulder and waistline reduction during the same surgery. The properly qualified patient is typically one that brings someone with them to assist in their early recovery phase after they return to the hotel the morning after surgery. This combination body contouring surgery is very difficult to take on alone.
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon
Q: Dr. Eppley, I underwent V-line surgery and zygoma reduction surgery nine months ago. But I’m still unhappy with my face width/size. I’m wondering if it’s possible I still have any swelling in my face? I know it’s been 9 months but I’m wondering if it’s possible I still have residual swelling. Maybe not, but I think people experience swelling slightly differently?
I have attached a post op pic of myself. Please let me know what you think,
A:It would be safe to assume that you have 95% (probably more) resolution of any swelling. With your thicker facial tissues you were never at risk of having too narrow or an overly oval shaped face. (overcorrection) Your aesthetic risk of the surgery is exactly what you are experiencing now…a result that is less than the desired amount of change. (undercorrection)
Dr. Barry Eppley
World-Renowned Plastic Surgeon