Archive for the ‘Facelift / Face Lift / S lift / Mini Lift / Weekend Face Lift / Quick Lift / Image Lift’ Category

What is the cost to improve the double chin and droopy cheek appearance.

Monday, March 1st, 2010

The pricing on this varies depending on location and who you are seeing.  Some doctors have a better reputation and will charge a lot more for their services.  This reputation is usually based on results and word of mouth.  The pricing that is mentioned above will usually not include other fees assessed for anesthesia who have their own fees for these procedures and they usually are based on the time it takes to do the procedures.

The procedures that will help each area will include the necklift (Dr Philip Young of Bellevue, WA) and facelift for the double chin area. Droopy cheeks can be addressed by midface lifts, and deep plane facelifts.  My personal opinion is that droopy cheeks are best augmented by volume and I prefer fat injections and the YoungVolumizer for this particular issue.

I hope that helps.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

What can be done for reoccuring jowls after having a facelift 3 years ago? What about the thread lift?

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

A Prejowl inmplant or Fillers / Fat injections (Dr Philip Young Seattle Washington) could help the looseness in the jowls.  The jowls occur for a number of different reasons. If you read my other blogs you can find pictures that illustrate jowls.  What happens is that when you lose volume in the face, especially the cheeks and jawline area along with volume around the mouth, the jowls become more prominent.  As an example, pinch the skin by your upper cheeks just inferior and lateral to the eye.  Notice as you do this, that the jowls begin to rise a little bit.  Now in front of your jowls is a depression and volume loss call the prejowl area.  This area along the jawline and closer to the lips and in front of the marionette lines can be filled in as well.  Also along the jaw in front of the ear can also be filled in and this can have an effect on the jowls decreasing.  Sometimes people fill in the prejowl area with fillers and fat injections to reduce the appearance of the jowls through a camouflage type of correction. In terms of volumizing with fillers, you can also use fat injections for the same thing and you can add more volume with fat than you can, a lot of times, than with filler.  Fillers are quite a bit more expensive than fat for filling in volumes.  Sculptra is another option in between fat and fillers. Sculptra can last over 2 years and some are finding more than that.  Other options for the jowls include direct liposuction of the jowl area.  Thread lifts, in my opinion, don’t work. They pull on the skin for a time being but relax and most of the time I don’t think you get any long term improvement.  The only time you get long term improvement is when you turn the thread lift into basically a facelift done in many traditional ways.

I hope that helps.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

How much bandaging do you receive after a facelift?

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Plastic surgeons vary in terms on how much bandaging they do when they do facelifts (Dr Young, Facelift in Bellevue, near Seattle Washington).  I personally do not like to rely on bandaging to hold the skin down and prevent fluid accumulation.  When your bandages are too tight you can create a situation where your skin doesn’t get blood flow as easily and readily.  This can put your skin at risk for having problems like skin partially not surviving.  I usually use drains to do this, and they have been scientifically proven over many studies to benefit decreasing blood flow although they haven’t been shown to prevent very large accumulations of bleeding which is often called a hematoma.  I believe that drains are alot better for the healing from a facelift and do minimal bandaging.  I just use a sticky ace wrap that is 4 inches in width and some gauze pads underneath.  I usually say to wrap 24 hours for the first week or two if they can and then to wrap for the first two months at night.  Pressure from the bandaging can help with healing over this time.  You can do this wrapping for a longer time if you have additional swelling.

I hope that helps.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Why are my face and neck lifts different?

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

First. I have a lot of experience doing facelifts (Shows Dr Young’s Actual Patients).  I’ve done over 1200 and I’ve done almost every imaginable approach to facelifting.  What I’ve learned is that there are several ways to do this procedure and it really depends on the person and what he or she wants.  I do think that minilifts are not long lasting but could be good for the person who doesn’t want a big difference in the face and neck.  As I mentioned in another blog where I show the difference between the many variations of face and neck lifts, the minilift really just pulls up on the facial muscles with sutures. So you are depending a lot on the sutures and subsequent scarring that will hold the lift up.  This works for some people but not everybody. I think this lift works best in a patient that has lost a lot of weight and has a lot of skin and loose structures.  Also, I find that older patients typically haven loosen their anatomy enough to respond to a minilift more than other types of faces. I find that people that have a little bigger face tend to have stronger tissues that resist the minilift’s forces of pulling with just the sutures.  Younger patients also have tighter tissue that respond less to a minilift. If in doubt I think that more traditional approaches get way better release of the structures.  The reason for this is that there are many retaining ligaments in the face, see the picture below.  The zygomatic cutaneous ligaments are tough fibers that hold the cheek to the bone inferior and lateral to the eye.  The parotid masseteric ligaments hold the tissue in front of the parotid to the skin with a long row of fibers from the zygomatic arch to the jawline.  The mandibular ligaments hold the skin to the jawline.  All of the ligaments prevent the skin from going upward when you do a facelift and if you don’t break them up properly they resist most facelifting attempts and forces.  When you do a minilift, there are many times when you do lift the skin up far enough to break up these parotid and zygomatic ligaments.  And even if you do, the sutures that you use to pick up the tissues anterior to those ligaments are loose enough to come up and require a lot of force.  This is why many minilifts are more painful in actuality than traditional full facelifts.  In my experience doing more than 1200 facelifts I have definitely found that to be the case.  Most of the time, you really need to do traditional maneuvers to break up those ligaments and this is usually done through working under the facial muscles or the SMAS.  Also, knowing how to extend these sub SMAS facelifts over the smiling muscles is a vital technique that most surgeons don’t know how to do.  When these zygomatic ligaments are released you can lift up the middle part of the face, the area above the mouth folds (nasolabial folds), much easier.  When the parotid masseteric ligaments are properly released you can pull up the jowls and folds around the mouth much easier as well.  This more complicated facelift is typically called variations of the deep plane lift, composite lift and zygo-orbicularis lift.

One thing to realize is that not all neck lifts are done equally. Take it from me.  I have done hundreds of minilifts with mini neck lifts and there are more definitive ways to pull up the neck (Dr Young’s Neck Lift, Bellevue Office).  There are many shortcuts that you can do that help but really don’t make a huge difference.  When I do a neck lift, I remove all of the fatty tissue in the neck by actually cauterizing it away.  On top of this, I also take the fat away underneath the chin in a deeper plane.  All of this takes time, and shortcuts don’t get to these areas and you are always left with neck laxity and loose skin and fat in the neck.  There are also other techniques I do to address the deeper muscles underneath the chin that most surgeons do not know how to do.  I have learned over doing so many neck lifts, that cutting the Platysma is not as beneficial as leaving it intact.  When you leave it intact you are able to tighten the neck better and I do a corset type of sewing to really tighten up all the neck muscles for a tighter neck.  This takes a lot of experience to do.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Retaining Ligaments

After a facelift you continue to age but you will always look better than a twin that never had it done

Friday, February 5th, 2010

After a facelift (Dr Young, Bellevue Washington), you continue to age but you will always look better than a twin that never had it done.  Of course, you have to make sure a facelift is what is going to make you look good.  I think that when facelifts are redone more than once, the more you do the more you can look distorted.  When you age with a facelift, some have found that you can have what people call the lateral sweep affect.  This occurs when your face is pulled laterally and what keeps it up is also more lateral and in between the tissues can hang as you age.  What you get is two points that are higher, one lateral and one nearer to the midline of the face creating a Nike type of swoosh appearance.  At some point, you really need volumizing to make your face look younger.  So if a person has had a facelift before and wants to look younger, I usually talk about the YoungVolumizer as an alternative.  This is my technique of volumizing the face.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Nasolabial Fold Grafts are another option to improve the Nasolabial folds.

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Nasolabial folds are a very common structure that develops as one ages and it is one of the most common structures that people want to get rid of.  I’ve learned a lot of things about improving this structure.  Facelifts have been experimented with over the years and most people believe that the deep plane facelift when the SMAS is lifted over the smiling muscles is the best way to improve the nasolabial folds from a facelift prospective.  Others find that a midface lift does this better.  Others find that volumizing the cheek in certain ways improves the fold as well.  Fillers have been used in the nasolabial folds to improve them and this is a very common option that people have chosen.

My opinion is dependent on the person’s anatomy.  If the person has a lot of tissue and has some extra weight that they have gained.  Volumizing might make the face a little too big.  In this case a facelift can help improve the nasolabial folds.  One thing that can help the folds is too fill the volume up with a nasolabial fold graft.  This graft can be taken from the SMAS (superficial muscular aponeurosis system) which is the layer of tissue that is connected to all of the facial muscles. The SMAS is convenient because this the layer that the facelift uses to pull the face and can be easily taken to use for the nasolabial fold graft.  This graft can be placed in the nasolabial folds through the nose and can help improve their appearance along with the deep plane facelift.

If a person is against such a surgical procedure than I think volumizing might be the best choice for them.  This can be done with essentially no incisions.  The YoungVolumizer is great for this.  If undergoing a procedure like this is too involved for the particular person, then volumizing with fillers such as restylane, radiesse, juvederm, and perlane are options.  Sculptra is another long term permanent filler option that can also be used to improve and volumize the face to improve the nasolabial folds.  In terms of fillers and volumizing, there is a special location, an area that contains a deep fat pocket that really helps to decrease the nasolabial folds when it is volumized.  It takes a lot of experience to learn how to fill up this fat pocket with fillers and other volumizers, like the “The YoungVolumizer” procedure.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Can the area under the chin in the neck be made to look good even without the help of a chin implant?

Monday, December 7th, 2009

A chin implant and augmentation can improve the lax tissue under the chin by pulling up the tissues that are causing the sagging double chin.  It can improve the neck lift even more than when a neck lift is done alone.  A neck lift (Platysmaplasty, Neck Rejuvenation, Lower Face lift, Necklift, submentoplasty, double chin surgery, turkey gobbler surgery, neck enhancement) done well though can significantly tighten the neck.  The key is how the platysma muscle is treated.  This muscle is essential to how the neck looks.  When doing a neck lift, the platysma must be tightened from just under the chin to the bottom of the neck area.  This changes the structures of the neck for a better shape.  There are also other adjunctive techniques that can be done to the fat, tissues and the muscle under the chin which can also improve the way the neck looks.  Another very important key to tightening the neck is by making sure that the skin of the neck has a place to go.  Elevating the skin to a certain degree is essential to allow the skin to shift to a more shapely appearance.  All of this takes experience and knowledge on the part of the surgeon.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

What are the different types of facelifts out there, an explanation and interesting picture are shown.

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

Facelift (or face lift, quick lift, smas lift, short scar lift, facial rujevenation, thread lift, s lift, weekend lift, lunch time lift, one hour lift) is generally a procedure that lifts part of the face. It works to improve the jowl area (see figure 1),marionette lines (see figure 2), neck bands (see figure 3), neck laxity, double chin, and nasolabial folds (see figure 4). You can see the pictures showing where these anatomic structures are located. After a facelift, many of these things are improved as seen in the before and afters (see figure 5 & 6 ). There are many names for a facelift and you might have heard some of these names in the media. Essentially all facelifts including these advertised lifts that are labelled as minimally invasive all entail pulling on a layer of tissue called the SMAS or Superficial Muscular Aponeurotic System. The SMAS is the layer of tissue  that includes the facial muscles and platysma as seen in figure 7.  This layer of tissue is the layer that all facelifts lift or pull on to create the beneficial aspects of a facelift.  It does so because the SMAS is connected to other facial muscles and the pulling of the SMAS is transposed to the facial muscles that are located around the areas that need to be improved.  How do facelifts differ? They differ in terms of how much undermining the surgeon does in front of the ear, how deep the dissection goes, how long the incision is carried out and what other adjunctive procedures are included to improve the facelift results.  Most minimally invasive facelifts entail less undermining, they usually use sutures to pull up the SMAS and they limit their dissection and the extent of their incisions.  Minimally invasive facelifts that are advertised out there usually entail about 3-5cm of skin undermining in front of and behind the ear (see figure 8 blue line).  Usually they entail also sutures to pull up the SMAS after skin undermining wtihout elevating the SMAS. Most minimally invasive facelifts leave the SMAS intact and use sutures to fold the SMAS up and hence shorten the SMAS lifting the face structures.  The sutures typically grab the SMAS near the furthest part of the dissection and then are fixed and pulled to immobile tissue around the ear.  The incision typically runs above the sideburn and then between the ear and the face.  The incision can go in front or behind the tragus and then it is carried in front of the earlobe and then behind the ear normally running in the crease and then it goes along or within the hairline (see figure 8). More advanced facelifts extend their skin undermining (figure 8 Yellow line) and the length of the incision.  They are more likely to take the incision along the direction of the green dashed arrow than minimally invasive facelifts. They also are more aggressive in their treatment of the SMAS through elevation of the SMAS and further dissection underneath the SMAS. Even more complicated facelifts carry their SUB SMAS dissection (dissection under the SMAS) over the facial muscles and specifically the zygomaticus major and minor which are the smile muscles (see figure 7).  The reason for taking the dissection over the smiling muscles is to have more of an affect on the nasolabial folds.  This approach is very complicated and usually mastered by the most experienced facelift surgeons.  Here is a picture of this dissection over the zygomaticus major and minor (see figure 9 smile muscles are labeled and what you are visualizing is the zygomaticus major) which I did during an October 2009 facelift.  Traditional facelifts are also more aggressive in their treatment of the neck muscles under the chin which I will discuss in a different blog.  I hope this helps you in understanding the facelifts out there.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Figure 1

Figure 1

Figure 2

Figure 2

Figure 3

Figure 3

Figure 4

Figure 4

Figure 5

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Figure 6

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Figure 7

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Figure 8

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Figure 9

Figure 9

What is a silhouette lift and will it last?

Friday, October 16th, 2009

This is a question I recently answered for someone asking about the silhouette lift which is a variation of a thread lift.

It really depends on how its done, is the bottom line.  If the sutures that they use are not properly placed and done without proper dissection the results will be temporary.  In order for the skin and muscle of the face to take on a new shape a significant amount of dissectiion is required to allow these tissues to readjust for the long term.  I’ve done over 1200 facelifts so I know how the effects of a superficial lift is compared to a more traditional approach. There is a huge difference.  With the minimal dissection they purport, the results are going to be temporary.  Anything done in 45 minutes will not last years based on my pretty extensive experience with facelifting.

I hope that helps!

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

What are the options for reducing the size of your pores. Does a facelift work for this?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

This is a question that I answered for a client who had questions regarding whether a facelift would work to reduce the pore size as well as acne scars:

Fat grafting, laser resurfacing, ipl are better options than a facelift (face lift/ lifestyle lift / quick lift / lunch time lift / mini lift / weekend lift / s lift / lifelift / thread lift ). Some newer studies and results from physicians more recently are showing that these modalities may be more beneficial to reduce pore size for people.  A facelift will not effectively do this but it can improve your wrinkles to an extent.  Fat grafting (or fat transfer / fat augmentation / facial fat transfer / fat injections) has been shown by some to regenerate the skin including reducing the size of your pores.  Stem cells in the transferred fat can rejuvenate the skin for years.  Laser resurfacing through the creation of new collagen can also reduce the size of the pores as well.  Ipl is another newer treatment for pore size.  Out of all the options fat grafting might be the best option for pore size and acne scarring.  More and more surgeons are using fat grafting as a way to improve acne scarring.

I refined an amazing volumizing procedure called “the YoungLift”. This is an innovative technique that volumizes your face to bring out the younger and natural you without looking like you had something done. This is not a facelift and requires no incisions. Only pinpoint puncture sites are used and these heal imperceptibly. The YoungLift can be done without general anesthesia and without drains, and large bandages. You also have sometimes a lot less downtime and discomfort compared with traditional facelift procedures. I employ the very best techniques from around the world into one volumizing procedure and I use my internationally acclaimed understanding of facial beauty to create the youthful volume you once had. In your case, the Younglift could help fill in the acne scars and volumize your face which will reduce your pore size

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington