Facial Plast Surg
DOI: 10.1055/a-2290-3904
Original Article

Medial Ligament Release: Is It a Proportional Standard?

Capi C. Wever
1   Wever Clinic, Wassenaar, The Netherlands
› Author Affiliations

Abstract

Assessing the proportionality of extended facelift surgery across surgeons is not an easy task. Risks and assumed benefits need to be weighted, yet, especially the latter is difficult to objectify. Reverse engineering the pathway of two leading facelift surgeons suggest that excellent training and focused high-volume facelift surgery preceded their leadership. Yet these conditions are not available to all surgeons. Hence defining extended facelift techniques as the professional standard, could promote novice surgeons into a path that may not correspond to safe practice.



Publication History

Accepted Manuscript online:
19 March 2024

Article published online:
11 April 2024

© 2024. Thieme. All rights reserved.

Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
333 Seventh Avenue, 18th Floor, New York, NY 10001, USA

 
  • References

  • 1 Jacono AA, Alemi AS, Russell JL. A meta-analysis of complication rates among different SMAS facelift techniques. Aesthet Surg J 2019; 39 (09) 927-942
  • 2 Wever CC. Old fashioned Cool. In: Het Ziekenhuis. Oderwald-AK (red). De Tijdstroom. 2009
  • 3 Shryock R. The Development of Modern Medicine. Hafner Publishing; 1969
  • 4 Dewey J. How we think. 1910
  • 5 McDermott J. The Culture of Experience: Philosophical Essays in the American Grain. Waveland; 1987
  • 6 Gladwell M. Outliers. Penguin Books; 2009
  • 7 Lambros VS. Discussion: The staged face lift: addressing the biomechanical limitations of the primary rhytidectomy. Plast Reconstr Surg 2012; 130 (06) 1315-1316
  • 8 Fisch U. [Surgical results of stapedectomy or stapedotomy (author's transl)]. HNO 1979; 27 (11) 361-367