Archive for the ‘Neck Lift’ Category

Tuesday, August 2, 2011 @ 11:08 AM
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     Facial cosmetic surgery is a very personal and monumental decision.  Universally, all patients want the best outcomes.  In today’s corporatized America, with heavily influential marketing spin, pharmaceutical companies, medical device companies, and even practitioners promote a less is more mentality to push products and services that often over promise and under deliver on the results.  In no way can skin creams, injectables, or lasers deliver the types of results once can achieve with surgery.  In a similar manner, minimally invasive sounding surgeries are in no way a substitute for time tested peer reviewed procedures that provide quality long lasting results.
 

     Unfortunately not every person will achieve acceptable results with Botox or injectable fillers such as Juvederm, Restylane, and Radiesse.  These products have their place in facial aesthetic practices, in properly selected patients, but in general should be viewed as temporary treatments with less impressive results when compared to surgery.  Their primary advantage is that they have minimal social while providing a benefit.  Botox is being used more and more as a preventative cosmetic medicine that delays wrinkle formation.  Fillers camouflage initial signs of aging, but ultimately putting too much filler in a face, the liquid facelift, can alter ones appearance creating an artificial overinflated appearance.  Using filler to augment facial structures can be useful to patients wanting to get a general idea of the appearance prior to permanent surgical procedures such as lip and cheek enhancements procedures.  Creams reverse the signs of photo aging and contribute to collagen formation and production but are limited in their effectiveness. Lasers are an excellent option to delay the signs of aging and treat sun induced skin photoaging, but in no way can they tighten skin like facial cosmetic surgeries such as a facelift.
 

     Surgical procedures are the best option for impressive endurable results.  Rhinoplasty can dramatically affect ones facial appearance in a way that almost no other cosmetic surgery can.  The nose can cause undue and unnecessary attention drawing attention away from other attractive facial features.  Aging face surgery has many layers of effectiveness based on the surgical techniques used and how they are applied.  In general, minimally invasive techniques can produce an artificial appearance and or short-term results.  When considering aging face surgery most sophisticated patients are looking for surgeries that will last as long as possible with the most dramatic natural appearing results.  There are no shortcuts to achieving optimal results and when applied, shortcut techniques frequently under deliver on the surgical results end.
    

      Becoming an informed patient who understands the benefits of finding the right intervention or surgery for the right patient will ultimately save one time and money over the long haul.  Getting things done right the first time is of paramount importance to achieving optimal outcomes with a high degree of patient satisfaction, while avoiding problems and bad outcomes.

 

Posted by: Benjamin C. Stong MD

Tuesday, June 28, 2011 @ 10:06 AM
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     Atlanta facelift surgeons are variable in the extent of their training and the techniques they use to rejuvenate the aging face.   A facelift describes a procedure that rejuvenates the lower third of the face (jowls) and neck.  As we age, skin looses elasticity and subsequently, elongates and sags.  A facelift is designed to remove the excess skin while tightening the muscles of the face, the SMAS.  The longevity associated with a particular facelift technique is solely dependent on the technique used to tighten the muscles of the face because the SMAS supports the lift.  The primary reason that facelifts fail early is that the majority of surgeons perform abbreviated, less comprehensive SMAS lifts because they are uncomfortable with the delicate anatomy of the face and unfamiliar with more comprehensive techniques.

      With less comprehensive techniques, such as plication or lateral SMASectomy procedures, there is less skin removed, the results do not last as long, and they are not as dramatic.  Although much of the marketing about the less comprehensive techniques is geared towards promising minimal healing times with equal results, the counter opposite is true.  Healing times are equal or even shorter with more comprehensive techniques such as the mini deep plane facelift, and the results are better with improved longer term results.  The most comprehensive facelift is designed to last eight to ten years, but with other techniques results can fail as early as one year after surgery.

      Most patients prefer to have fewer surgeries with the longest lasting outcomes.  Revision facelift surgery is done for two reasons: because of suboptimal results from a previous suboptimal surgery, or as a natural consequence of the continued aging process after a facelift.  Even with the best facelift techniques, patients may undergo several facelift surgeries in their lifetime to maintain a youthful look over the last two to four decades of their lives.

     The most proven facelift techniques are the extended sub-SMAS and deep plane facelifts.  Both techniques can now be performed through the most state of the art Mini Facelift incisions.  Older, more traditional facelift incisions were unnecessarily long, creating more obvious scars that required patients to change their hair styles to camouflage their incisions.  With contemporary, shorter incision techniques, patients can wear their hair as the desire, even in a pony tail.

     Facial plastic surgeons are highly skilled, specially trained physicians that are exclusively trained in head and neck anatomy and surgery with additional, advanced training in facial plastic and reconstructive surgery procedures.  When choosing a facial plastic surgeon, one should look for a surgeon that is dual board certified in Head and Neck Surgery and Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. This insures that the surgeon has met the rigorous standards required for training and certification to become a facial plastic surgeon.  Finally, when choosing a facelift surgeon, a patient should choose a surgeon they trust and have a good rapport with, in order to avoid suboptimal and sometimes disastrous outcomes.

 

 

Posted by: Benjamin C. Stong MD

Atlanta GA

Wednesday, March 2, 2011 @ 11:03 AM
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    Facelift surgery is an intensely personal decision and many patients can have difficulty sorting through the marketing terminology in the plastic surgery industry in order to choose the surgeon and the type of facelift most appropriate for their individual issues.  Often, patients can have a significant degree of anxiety and uncertainty when choosing their plastic surgeon. Seeking out a facial plastic surgeon with the latest and most advanced facelift surgery techniques as well as choosing the surgeon one feels most comfortable with will avoid bad and even sometimes disastrous outcomes.

    Many of the mini facelift surgery techniques available today can only offer short term corrections for their aging jawlines and neck.  Most patients want to have the longest lasting results in order to avoid additional surgeries and healing periods and requiring fewer surgeries during their lifetime.  Revision facelift surgeries are often more challenging for the surgeon and more expensive for the patient, and getting it right the first time is of paramount importance.

    Expert facelift surgeons agree that the deep plane facelift provides the most superior outcomes and long lasting results in facelift surgery techniques available today.  Older, more traditional facelift incisions have been associated with unacceptable scarring that can be difficult for the patient to camouflage.  In recent years, cosmetic surgeons have refined facelift incisions to develop the shortest, least noticeable facelift incisions.  These incisions have several different names including: the s-lift, short scar facelift, endoscopic facelift, and mini facelift.

     Until recently, the deep plane facelift was unable to be performed through the tiny hidden incisions of a mini facelift.  A few national and international expert facelift surgeons have refined the technique to be able to perform the deep plane facelift through these shorter facelift incisions.  Dr. Benjamin C. Stong at Kalos Facial Plastic Surgery trained with one of these advanced facelift surgeons and now delivers this superior facelift procedure to his clients in the Atlanta metropolitan area and patients throughout the United States as well as the world.

    An additional benefit to the mini deep plane facelift, is that it can be performed safely in smokers as well as revision surgery patients with the shortest downtime, thereby getting patients back to work and their social lives as fast as possible.  Laser skin resurfacing can also be performed safely during the deep plane facelift avoiding significant complications associated with skin resurfacing procedures with other facelift surgery techniques.
 

    The mini deep plane facelift is safe and effective in all age groups, genders, and skin types.  Kalos facial plastic surgery is the first to offer this technique in Atlanta and the surrounding areas.  The cost is similar to other facelifts widely available today, just without the uncertainty of the outcomes.  Finding a surgeon who performs this procedure is critical to achieving the best and longest lasting results.

Posted by: Benjamin C. Stong MD

Sunday, June 27, 2010 @ 09:06 AM
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    A facelift is a procedure designed to restore the neck and the lower third of the face, evolving tremendously over the previous 40 years.  The deep plane facelift went through several developmental stages and today serves as one of the very best facelift techniques to provide patients with a long term correction of the jaw line and excess skin and fat in the neck.  Early facelift pioneers discovered the SMAS (muscular) layer of the face and its importance in facelift surgery.  Releasing the SMAS layer allowed aggressive re-suspension of the facial soft tissues, correcting the jowls and defining of the jaw line.  Next the “Bi-planer” facelift lifted and contoured the neck to remove the excess skin and fat in addition to releasing and suspending the SMAS layer.  The “tri-planer” facelift was then developed, to mobilize the tissues of the midface below eyelids and treat the nasolabial folds.  This technique resulted in a less than satisfactory midface correction.  Finally, Hamra refined this technique into the Deep Plane Facelift, releasing the suspensory ligaments just below the midface resulting in a correction of the midfacial drop and a softening of the nasolabial folds in addition to the correction of the jaw line and neck.  This offered a unique facelift procedure, because it was much more comprehensive than any technique previously described.  Today many of the best facelift surgeons use a variation of this technique.
    

    The deep plane face lift can now be combined with mini facelift incisions to provide the maximum amount of correction available with a single facelift procedure while using the smallest incisions.  Many patients falsely believe that the “Deep Plane” facelift will result in longer healing times.  In truth, there is actually less bruising and risk of hematoma than with other techniques.  With the deep plane facelift the correction in the midface and nasolabial folds is less permanent than the correction of the neck and jaw line.  It is not as effective as a separate endoscopic temporal midface lift as a midface lift procedure.  Surgeons who perform the deep plane facelift have had specialized training in the technique because it requires an intricate knowledge of the anatomy of the soft tissues of the face and the facial nerve to achieve optimal outcomes and avoid complications.
 

    When consulting about facelift surgery, the overall expenses in addition to the healing period are foremost considerations.  Most informed patients are seeking to have a procedure that will offer the longest term and most complete correction, thereby decreasing the overall cost from unnecessary revision surgeries.  The deep plane facelift is currently one of two “gold standard” procedures, to correct the aging jaw line and neck, the other being an extended Sub-SMAS facelift.  It is the only procedure to offer a correction of the midfacial soft tissue drop and the nasolabial folds with a single procedure.
 

    Facelifts are often combined with other procedures, including: upper and lower eyelid blepharoplasty and brow lifts for a “full facelift” surgery.  In addition, a skin rejuvenation plan is important to add to surgical procedures to attain superior results.  Laser surgery and medical grade skin care products are often combined to offer the state of the art in skin rejuvenation therapy.  Consultation with an expert facial plastic surgeon is critical to developing a strategy to restore and preserve ones youth and beauty.

Benjamin C. Stong MD

Atlanta, GA

Sunday, April 4, 2010 @ 12:04 PM
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    The fourth and fifth decades of life are a time when people often begin to become more aware of age and committed to facial plastic surgery procedures.  Accumulated sun damage and prior skin care rejuvenation regimens affect when patients begin to consider blepharoplasty, brow lifts, and facelifts during these decades.  Often, patients will also add staged or simultaneous skin resurfacing rejuvenation procedures to maximize and augment surgical results.  There is often a misconception that surgery and procedures need to be delayed as long as possible to avoid additional surgeries in the future.  The truth is there is no good or bad time to under go surgical and skin rejuvenation procedures; it is only appropriate when a patient becomes bothered enough by the issue to consider surgery and is an intensely personal decision.  The most important consideration to avoid bad outcomes and unnecessary surgeries is to find a practitioner who uses techniques that will provide superior, long lasting results.
 

    Eyelid lift surgery or blepharoplasty offers a long lasting procedure and when performed correctly is often not necessary to have repeated in the future.  Similarly, Brow Lifts usually only need to be performed once if the surgery addresses the laxity issues in the forehead, upper eyelid, and brow complex and adequately releases and re-suspends these tissues.  Minor touch up procedures may be included in future treatments to maintain and maximize results from blepharoplasty and brow lifts.  Revision surgery becomes important when considering revising suboptimal results from poor, inadequate techniques and is more difficult due to scar tissue from the previous surgery and is more expensive.  Having a procedure performed correctly the first time is of paramount importance.
 

    Facelifts are procedures that can be performed multiple times over a patient’s lifetime.  To avoid unnecessary and costly revision surgeries, finding a surgeon who effectively releases and re-suspends the SMAS layer, the primary support layer, of the face is important.  Many surgeons believe they get equally effective results with less aggressive work on the SMAS layer, but there is no short cut to providing superior long lasting results.  When performed properly, a facelift can provide patient satisfaction for ten years, or more.  A facelift addresses an aging jaw and neck line, resetting the clock, but it does not stop the clock from restarting.  Some patients who want to be aggressive about hiding their age may choose to undergo two or three facelifts during their life.  Another popular misconception is that undergoing multiple facelifts will result in a pulled or windswept look.  The truth is that when the skin and deeper SMAS layer are pulled in the correct direction, a facelift can be performed as many times as desired to maintain a more youthful jaw and neck line.  An additional misconception is that a comprehensive and thorough jaw, cheek, and neck lift can’t be performed through an abbreviated mini facelift incision.  This notion is also false; a thorough facelift can be performed through the short scar, abbreviated, mini, s-lift facelift incisions safely with superior outcomes.  Consultation with a knowledgeable facial plastic surgeon will allow for a comprehensive facial rejuvenation plan over the years when a patient is interested and healthy enough for surgical procedures.
 

    Skin resurfacing rejuvenation procedures are important to consider when augmenting and maximizing surgical results.  In addition to noninvasive lasers such as IPL LimeLight and YAG Laser genesis procedures, ablative resurfacing procedures become necessary to maintain youthful looking skin.  Finding a practitioner who offers the state of the art laser rejuvenation procedures is necessary for excellent outcomes with the shortest healing times.  Currently, combining confluent and fractionated laser modalities offers the best treatment for both superficial and deep discolorations and wrinkles as well as stimulating collagen formation. It also avoids complications and prolonged healing times from more traditional chemical peels and lasers.  Laser resurfacing rejuvenation procedures can be performed as often as necessary to restore and maintain youthful, vibrant looking skin.

     Botox, facial fillers, medical skin care products and other preventative and maintenance therapies should be continued in the forties and fifties to maximize the longevity of surgeries and skin rejuvenation procedures. Consultation with a knowledgeable facial plastic surgeon, who applies a global perspective when discussing patient goals and their future considerations, will put the patient at ease and establish trust that the practitioner is making thoughtful recommendations based on his expertise and training.

Posted by: Benjamin C. Stong MD

Saturday, March 6, 2010 @ 06:03 PM
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     Delaying the aging process begins in the early childhood and adolescent years.  Sunscreen and sun protection are critically important.  In fact, the amount of sun exposure in childhood is one of the most important factors in keeping healthy skin.  Photodamage is accumulated over time, eventually resulting in dyschromias or discolorations and blemishes, well formed wrinkles, and sagging skin.  There are preventative and maintenance therapies that will delay the process and the need for potential surgeries.  The foundation begins with excellent sunscreen and sun protection to prevent and delay skin photoaging and the use of skin products to reverse sun damage and improve overall skin health.
     Facial muscle movement is the primary determining factor in the orientation and pattern of wrinkle formation.  Botulinum Toxin is a neurotoxin that weakens these muscles delaying the severity and formation of wrinkles.  Botox and Dysport are the most widely used form of Botulinum Toxin and have no significant side effects or safety issues.  The three most common areas injected are between the eyebrow, around the eyes, and in the forehead.  Many people fear that they will lose their ability to convey emotion through facial expressions.  Skillful, precise injections are important to avoid disappointing results.  By weakening the muscles and reducing the ability to furrow, squint, and wrinkle your forhead the formation of the 11’s, crows feet, and worry lines respectively is significantly delayed.  Some patients may elect to begin Botox therapy very early on in their 20’s before any wrinkle formation to be as preventative and proactive as possible.
 

    The two most common reasons to start facial filler therapy are to augment facial structures that are naturally small and hide the early effects of aging.  The most common facial feature enhanced by haluronic acid products namely Juvederm and Restylane is the lips to have more luscious, seductive lips.  The critical technique to excellent lip injections is to divide the lips into subzones and build the borders first to provide definition and then build the subzones of the red lip to add height and volume as appropriate.  Overfilling is undesirable and is spotted easily by most individuals.  It is also the reason that many patients who may benefit from lip injections are skeptical and avoid haluronic acid lip fillers.  The key is to go to a professional injector who understands the concepts of building both definition and volume to avoid a “plastic” unusual look.  Additionally, haluronic acid fillers are used to hide the effects of aging such as wrinkles and folds from sun damage and facial movement, and the decent of the soft tissues of the face from gravity.  At some point the extra skin accumulated necessitates surgery instead of continuing to use fillers to avoid an overfilled, inflated look.  Fillers to camouflage signs of aging usually begin in the thirties and commonly include filling the tear trough under the eye or the nasolabial folds first.
 

    Laser skin rejuvenation should begin in the twenties when no down time, minimally invasive lasers are most beneficial as a primary procedure choice.  The laser genesis and LimeLight photofacial are two excellent minimally invasive, no downtime laser procedure options performed during the twenties and thirties.  They improve skin texture, pore size, melasma, freckling, sunspots, rosacea, superficial wrinkling and reverse the early signs of sun damage.  The effects of the less invasive procedures are additive and synergistic and usually require stacking the procedures through a series or package to achieve optimal outcomes and can be used as maintenance therapy.  The Pearl Procedure is an excellent ablative resurfacing procedure for patients in their mid to late thirties or even earlier with relatively advanced sun damage, but it does have a short healing period and patients should be prepared appropriately.  Its primary advantage is that it can be performed as an isolated, individual, primary procedure, rather than a package or series.
 

    The elements to maintaining youth and beauty begin early in life and requires adherence to preventative and minimally invasive therapeutic regimens.  The most common surgical procedure performed for age related changes before the age of forty is lower eyelid blepharoplasty to get rid of puffiness and excess skin.  Others may choose to have a midface lift with buccal fat pad contouring to change the shape of their face from a rounded, boxy face to a more tapered, heart shaped face.  Patients in their twenties and thirties are also good candidates for liposuction neck lifts because of the skins ability to contract and tighten following the procedure.  Consultation with a skilled Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon will help develop a comprehensive plan to delay the aging process and maintain your youth and beauty.

 Post provided by Benjamin C. Stong MD

Monday, February 22, 2010 @ 08:02 AM
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     The topic of neck rejuvenation requires a discussion of skin rejuvenation, liposuction, facelift surgery, and direct skin excisions.  Age related changes in the neck occur simultaneously with the age related changes in the face.  These changes include sun damage to the skin, accumulation of excess fat and skin, and the formation of vertical bands.  There is no absolute predictable pattern to how a neck will age and is intensely affected by an individual’s anatomy, genetics, diet and exercise patterns, and sun exposure.  As such, there is no single way to address a patient’s concerns and a rejuvenation plan must be tailored to a patient’s specific issues.
    

    As with any area of skin, the neck skin accumulates sun damage over years.  The skin of the neck is thinner than the skin of the face and is more prone to complications with aggressive rejuvenation procedures such as phenol peels and traditional CO2 laser resurfacing.  In general, the goal of laser skin rejuvenation is to be as aggressive as the tissue allows while balancing results with safety.  Although most laser companies do not recommend the use of ablative lasers on the neck, clinicians routinely use laser rejuvenation therapies with excellent outcomes.  A critical element to good outcomes is to use lower settings on the resurfacing laser or less aggressive chemical peel than in the face.
 

    Many patients believe they are good candidates for liposuction as a sole rejuvenation procedure.  In fact, the opposite is true, only a select few individuals are candidates for liposuction in isolation.  As we age the skin loses elasticity and subsequently its ability to contract.  The ideal candidate for neck liposuction is someone in their 20’s or 30’s with minimal sun damage or excess skin.  These individuals usually have skin that will contract back down following liposuction with good results.  Once sun damage has occurred and excess skin has accumulated, removal of skin becomes necessary.  Excellent liposuction techniques are also critical for great results.
 

    Most patients in their 40’s and 50’s have enough sun damage and excess skin to require removal.  There are two primary ways to address this issue.  The first is with a facelift or neck lift.  An abbreviated mini facelift incision can be used.  The neck skin is removed from the portion of the incision placed behind the ear.  Some surgeons may offer patients an isolated neck lift procedure using only the portion of the facelift incision behind the ear to avoid more obvious incisions in the neck.  Patients must understand that in no way will this address the excess skin and jowling of the face and is performed to avoid placing incision directly in the neck skin.  During the facelift or neck lift procedure the vertical bands are addressed by tightening the platysma muscle which acts as a corset for deeper neck fat that protrudes as we age.  The second way to address the excess skin of the neck is with a direct neck lift using a direct skin excision technique such as the Grecian Urn or another such procedures.  It is offered as a primary procedure almost exclusively in men.  Sometimes residual skin following a face or neck lift will be removed with smaller direct neck excision techniques, but in general it is a bad idea in women as a primary procedure because it will leave visible scars.  In men, because of their bearded skin, a direct neck excision can be a good alternative to a facelift procedure.  During a direct neck excision, the vertical bands should be addressed by tightening the underlying platysma muscle during the skin excision.
 

    Total neck rejuvenation in older patients should include removal of the excess skin by a method the patient and the physician are comfortable with, along with tightening of the platysma muscle and liposuction as indicated.  A staged skin rejuvenation procedure may be performed either before or after surgery to complete the rejuvenation.  Consultation with a knowledgeable and skilled facial plastic surgeon will help avoid bad outcomes and disappointing results.

Post provided by: Benjamin C Stong MD

Thursday, November 12, 2009 @ 11:11 AM
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    Since the advent of facelift surgery, the pursuit for optimal outcomes has been balanced by safety for the patient, the comfort level of the surgeon, and healing time.  Today, marketing strategies are directed towards advertising minimally invasive, short scar procedures with minimal down time.  Even more confusing to the body of information are terms such as the “nonsurgical face lift” and “liquid face lift.”  “Nonsurgical” and “Liquid Facelift” procedures involve laser procedures and facial fillers respectively, tightening the skin or filling in the normal loss of facial volume that occurs with age.  In no way do they involve tightening the deeper support structures of the face, a critical element to true facelift surgery.  Many people seeking facial rejuvenation believe that aggressive skin rejuvenation procedures can provide comparable results to facelift surgery and are often dissatisfied with the final outcomes.

   Minimally invasive and short scar facelifts are synonymous with the “s-lift” procedure.  In these procedures an abbreviated skin incision is used, compared to traditional facelift incisions, but they have nothing to do with how the support tissues in the face are released and suspended, the technical sophistication or longevity of the procedure, or the degree of lift achieved.  Facelifts are performed primarily to treat the jowls in the cheek and the vertical bands of the neck while removing excess skin from the face and neck.  The procedure can be modified based on the patient’s specific concerns and issues pertinent to their case.

    Commercialized, assembly line facelift procedures that promise minimal healing time often fail to deliver satisfactory results to patients because they either ignore tightening the deeper support structures of the face or do not adequately release and suspend these structures to gain an effective lift.  As such, there are diverging thoughts on the correct procedure to achieve an excellent long lasting outcome, with experienced surgeons falling on either side of the argument.  The most effective way to adequately achieve long lasting optimal results is to release the deeper support mechanisms of the face from the facial skeleton and suspend them with an abbreviated, camouflaged skin incision that does not effect the position of the sideburn or temporal hair tuft.

    To date, the two most universally effective ways to release the support structures of the facial soft tissue are the deep plane facelift and the extended subSMAS facelift.  Although these techniques have gone through an evolution and have been modified over time, they effectively release the retaining structures of the cheek and neck allowing for greater elevation and suspension and a youthful more natural look that can last 10-12 years.  These procedures can be performed with the shorter skin incision techniques in order to have a well camouflaged incision that does not alter normal facial structures. A common concern among patients considering facelift surgery is avoiding a wind swept or pulled look.  Contrary to popular belief, the technique used to tighten the deeper facial support structures has nothing to do with avoiding the “pulled look.”  The most important element is the direction of pull on the skin when closing the skin incision, so even “minimally invasive” surgeries can result in this problem depending on the direction of pull during closure.

    Healing after surgery is an important concept when considering the procedure.  After excluding obvious medical conditions, there are several routine medications recommended that have questionable benefit to affect a more rapid recovery.  Two herbal remedies that are routinely prescribed with facelift surgery include Arnica Montana and Bromelain for bruising and swelling, respectively.  There is no conclusive data to support the benefits of Arnica Montana and Bromelain, but there is also no significant risk of adding the medications to the operative regimen.  

    Comfort with your surgeon is of primary importance when considering facelift surgery.  Being an informed consumer is essential in order to avoid disappointing results and negative outcomes.  Knowledge about all the techniques relevant to performing facelift surgery is a very important characteristic when choosing a surgeon in order to achieve optimal outcomes and avoid complications.  There is no short cut to achieving good results in facelift surgery; in most cases patients are interested in one effective procedure during their lifetime, and as such it is necessary to understand the myths and truths behind the term “facelift.”

 Post provided by: Facelift Surgery Atlanta GA | Benjamin C. Stong MD

Thursday, October 15, 2009 @ 10:10 AM
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