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What
To Do If You Get A Bad 'Nose Job'
An
Excerpt from Cosmetic Surgery Times
Los
Angeles - Repairing a botched rhinoplasty -
or one that results in an obvious "nose
job" - calls for a totally different operation
and surgeon than are performing the initial
procedure, according to Los Angeles plastic
surgeon Richard Ellenbogen, M.D.
Tissue
is generally removed from various areas during
the primary surgery, whereas it is often added
in the secondary procedure.
Secondary
rhinoplasty patients are different from primary
patients. They are distrustful, skeptical -
even bitter - about having the surgery done
again. Often, secondary patients' insurance
has run out and they are paying for the correction
out-of-pocket. "Very frequently, they forget
the adage: Don't shoot the messenger. They may
end up taking a lot of their aggression and
hostility from the first surgeon out on you,"
Dr. Ellenbogen said.
Listening
and note-taking skills are among the most important
for successful secondary rhinoplasties. The
doctor must observe and listen to the patient
to determine what it is that the patient does
not like. "It's very easy for us to push
our ideas on patients and give them something
else that they don't want," said Dr. Ellenbogen,
a clinical instructor at the University of Southern
California and who is a member of the Rhinoplasty
Society.
Perhaps
what is most challenging about listening to
the secondary rhinoplasty patient is that he
or she usually cannot pinpoint the problem.
According
to Dr. Ellenbogen, if you are not the type of
physician who can listen and empathize with
somebody who has a problem, it might not be
the operation for you.
Patients
tend to closely scrutinize the surgery's artistic
success. And they do not want to hear that the
swelling should go down in six months to a year
because that is the erroneous information they
got from their previous doctor.
To
encourage the patient's trust and confidence,
Dr. Ellenbogen keeps and extensive file of his
previous secondary rhinoplasties. This allows
him to show new patients pictures of others
who have had similar defects successfully corrected.
He is also careful to be diplomatic when confronted
with negative comments about the other doctor's
work. Never state anything negative about the
previous surgeon. It will stimulate bad will
and possibly legal retribution by the patient.
CERTAIN
CORRECTIONS NOT FEASIBLE
Instead,
focus on what you are about to do. Communicate
that because of scar tissue, you can only do
the best that you possibly can. Certain corrections
may be impossible to perform.
"Basically,
you're saying to the patient, 'If you cannot
trust me to do my best, then possibly you shouldn't
have this surgery performed,' " Dr. Ellenbogen
said.
In
some rare cases, all facets of correction of
a very scarred secondary nose cannot be achieved
in one surgery and possibly another operation
of much less magnitude will be necessary."
Do
not be surprised when the secondary rhinoplasty
patient comes back to you for a second interview
for further reassurance. Even though this is
one of Dr. Ellenbogen's specialties, he finds
patients need to be re-consulted regarding the
intricacies of the surgery and their concerns.
Dr.
Ellenbogen draws the patient's intended correction
on Polaroid pictures of the patient's profile.
He prefers drawing on patients' pictures rather
than using his imager.
"Rarely
can I achieve exactly what I represent on the
[computer] imager, but on the Polaroid picture
- with my own pen and not a cursor - I'm able
to better surgically duplicate what I draw,
and satisfy the patient."
While
Dr. Ellenbogen sees more types of corrections
than are listed here, he said that these are
the most common.
In
addition, physicians should keep in mind that
most secondary rhinoplasties also may be needed
to repair a breathing problem.
Dr.
Ellenbogen advocates using a general anesthesia
the second time around. He said that many patients
recall surgeons talking - even laughing - during
previous procedures and think it might have
had something to do with their outcomes.
Common
reasons patients are dissatisfied with their
rhinoplasties include
The
Pinched Tip
Frequently,
the pinched tip is associated with the rim incision
technique bringing the lower cartilage out,
anterior to the rim, and some removal of the
cephallic margin and cross-hatching. This seems
to over-contract the tip on
occasion
and frequently the cartilage is not placed back
into the nasal tip symetrically. To correct
this, Dr. Ellenbogen makes an inter-cartilaginous
incision 5 mm from the rim and removes all cephalic
lower lateral cartilage. Frequently, the pinch
is held contracted by the cephalic-most portion
of the lower-lateral cartilage and the simple
removal of more cephalic cartilage will correct
the pinched tip. If this is not adequate, the
cartilage that is removed can be placed in the
rim to correct the pinch.
The
Hanging Columella
This
happens when doctors remove too much maxillary
spine or caudal septum. It is repaired using
a graft from the septum placed between the medial
crus cartilage, which brings the columella down
or directly excising the ala-rim higher.
The
Drop (Rounded) Tip
Dr.
Ellenbogen places a tip graft of septal cartilage
through a rim incision to support the tip. Frequently,
a columella graft has to be added to hold up
this tip.
The
Crooked Nose
Dr.
Ellenbogen has been disappointed using spreader
grafts between the septum and upper lateral
valvular area and prefers using onlay grafts
on the depressed upper lateral valvular area
to simulate the straight nose. Onlay grafts
are usually taken from the upper portion of
a lower lateral cartilage or crushed cartilage
from the septum.
The
Scooped Nose
For
dorsal augmentation, he uses septal cartilage.
Dr. Ellenbogen rarely uses Gore-Tex, silicone
or rib. Correcting the scooped nose is one of
the most difficult secondary corrections. Cranial
bone which was previously frequently used has
proven to dissolve with time and there is also
the problem of symmetry. A very carefully fashioned
layered septal cartilage graft or pinna ear
cartilage graft usually suffices.
High
Tip
This
can be corrected through lowering the tip by
removing the foot process of the medial crus
cartilage and more cephalic lower lateral cartilage
or dorsal septum.
Crooked
Nasal Bones
These
require a careful refracture of the frontal
process of the maxilla. Dr. Ellenbogen usually
fractures the medial osteotomy, then performs
the procedures with a 2 mm osteotomy through
the skin just above the medial canvas of the
eye, or a superior osteotomy. This guarantees
that he will not get a combination or rocking
chair deformity when he makes his lateral osteotomy.
The
Wide Nose
For
the wide Caucasian nose, a very judicious defatting
of the nasal tip in the sebaceous area, combined
with a removal of lower level cartilage and
a separation of the upper lateral cartilage
from the septum will often suffice. Occasionally,
a dorsal onlay graft is necessary.
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