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The very apex of her hump was wide as well as prominent. The upper part
of her dorsum had to be narrowed after removing the hump.
Actually, almost every nose has to be narrowed in the upper dorsum after
removing a hump. You can find a good explanation of why the narrowing is
necessary in the rhinoplasty surgery tutorial chapter
on narrowing the nasal bones (the surgery tutorials contain explicit photographs taken during surgery).
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Next: an example of the solid advice Dr. Denenberg gives patients on RealSelf.com.
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Questioner:
Am I a candidate for a Tiplasty?
My nose is currently in the pic above i would like it to look like the picture below it....what would require to be achieved? From research i have done i would think it would be a tip rotation and trim....if so...does this procedure require anethesea /would it be cheaper??? Thanks :) (Questioner submitted photos)
Dr. Denenberg's answer: I think you're right: upward rotation of the tip is the goal
When you are looking for a surgeon, be sure to see before and after photos of patients who have had a successful and substantial upward rotation of the tip. Many of the revision operations that I perform are on patients who needed rotation but didn't get it in their first operation. It's a change that every plastic surgeon cannot accomplish.
Link to this question on RealSelf.com
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