Nasal Surgery
| BEFORE & AFTER |


| SUMMARY |
Purpose (indications)
What It Does
Technique
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Recovery Time
Recovery Instructions
How Long It Lasts
Ancillary Procedures Commonly Performed In Conjunction With Nasal Surgery
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| MORE INFORMATION |
Nasal surgery is one of the most frequently performed surgeries. It is done not only for appearance, but also to improve breathing. The nose has multiple growth centers and doesn't mature until we reach puberty. Childhood trauma can damage these growth centers, with the end result being a crooked nose (both internally and/or externally). At other times, nasal characteristics may be an unwanted ethnic or family trait obtained through inherited genetics. Still other times, nasal aberrations may be directly related to more recently documented injury. Unfortunately, increased athletics, and increasing emphasis on keeping physically fit have also been associated with an increased number of nasal injuries. Fortunately, facial plastic surgery can often correct this problem.
WHAT WILL YOU LOOK LIKE
The nose is an individual characteristic. A nose that is natural for their face needs to be proportional for the face. The nose that looks right for the attractive model in a magazine, may not look right on your face. It may not be the right proportion for your face. The nose must be symmetrical and proportional.
The distance between the tip of the nose and the base should ideally equal the distance from the base to the upper lip. The angle between the nose and the upper lip (nasolabial angle) should be between 100 to 100-degrees. The base of the nose should fall within the plane of two lines drawn perpendicular from the inner aspect of each eye.
The nose consists of bone, cartilage and skin. The aesthetic obtainable result is limited to a large extent by the strength, tone, and shape of these tissues. Just as an artist is limited by the quality of the materials he uses, so is the facial surgeon limited by the patient's tissues.
Internally, one needs to think of the nose as an A-framed house with the middle partition (the septum) dividing it into equal parts. Unfortunately, often this middle partition is not straight. If it is deviated, widened, or thickened, it results in airway obstruction. This is the so-called "deviated septum". The lining of the nose is not straight. There are three projections on each side of the nose called turbinates. They provide more of a surface area for the nose to perform its functions. The function of the nose is to warm the air, increase humidification of air, and filter out impurities. The turbinates can become enlarged abnormally due to trauma or inhalation allergies. If they enlarge too greatly, they can obstruct the ostia drainage passages from the sinuses. This results in sinus headaches or infections. Many times the turbinates will swell at night when one is reclined. Mouth breathing, snoring, sore throats in the morning, chronic nasal congestion, posterior nasal drainage, nose bleeds (epistaxis) can all be signs of nasal deformity which may be decreased or eliminated with nasal surgery. (consider placing a table listing the common nasal symptoms).