Posts Tagged facelift

Reader Question: Failed Facelift at 35

Reader Question:

Dear Dr. Di Saia,
I am 35 and have had fullness or jowling at my jawline since my late 20′s. One year ago I had a Lower F/L (SMAS included) which the plastic surgeon said was the only thing that would address the jowling. The clean jawline only lasted for one month and then the jowling returned. In addition to that I developed hypertrophic scaring around the ears. Some doctors have said that I’m way to young to have had a Lower F/L and that due to my thick skin it is bound to fail. While others have stated that the doctor was not aggressive enough. Is this procedure never appropriate for someone my age?

I have not to date performed a facelift on such a young patient. Unless the problem was large enough in magnitude, I would not have operated. To date, I have not seen such a young patient appropriate for facelift. I have offered peels, botox, soft tissue fillers and an occasional blepharoplasty in this age group, but not a facelift.

As you have discovered, surgery involves risk. There needs to be enough potential benefit to make those risks reasonable. I would need to know a lot more before I tried to guess what might improve your current situation.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

Originally posted 2005-12-05 19:54:00.

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Kris Jenner Sues Over Facelift

…a new lawsuit has been filed by Jenner herself and it has to do with a face lift procedure she had done a while ago. According to Wetpaint Entertainment, the original report filed by TMZ discusses Jenner’s face lift and how it supposedly interfered with her ability to endorse the beauty product she had signed on to promote for the company. Well, she has filed a countersuit against the cosmetics company because she believes the company has breached the contract.
Source: celebs.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474981315119

The last time we discussed this case, the entertainment company was suing Kris Jenner. Now she is suing them back.

Apparently the company concerned contracted with Jenner as a spokesperson for their cosmetic product. She turned around and shortly thereafter had a very public facelift. The company claims she has disparaged their product by having cosmetic surgery and then promptly sued her.

Mrs Jenner claims that the surgery only affected her neck and not her face. I could be a witness for the entertainment company here. :) A well-done facelift affects the neck and at least a small portion of the lower face just to properly redistribute the skin.

Well no one is asking. :)

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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New Zealand Plastic Surgeon Censured After $31,000 Facelift

A plastic surgeon made a woman he had performed a $31,000 facelift on feel inadequate, humiliated and insignificant, the patient says. Health and Disability Commissioner Anthony Hill has censured the doctor for his treatment of the 49-year-old woman, Mrs A, who had the surgery in September 2008 because she was concerned about her “prematurely aged facial appearance”.

Mrs A and her husband travelled five hours for a 45-minute consultation, during which Dr B examined her and advised on what he believed would be the best surgery. He made no clinical record of the consultation but wrote to her summarizing the consultation and their discussions, and quoting $31,000 for the procedure.

She accepted, and about two months later Dr B performed an endoscopic brow lift, limited incision facelift, necklift, pinch lower blepharoplasty and upper eyelid blepharoplasty at a private hospital. Mrs A was initially happy with the results, emailing after a week to say she was “fascinated observing the changes”.

However, by January she was concerned about the skin on her cheekbones sagging and asking whether it was likely to tighten with time. Mrs A attended her follow-up appointment a year after the surgery and said she found Dr B “intimidating” when she said she was not happy with the results.

“… the consultation, which was conducted in a treatment room, made her feel inadequate, humiliated and insignificant,” Mr Hill said in his report, released today.

“He was vague about the causes of the poor outcome and told her it was not a ‘biggie’, that he would ‘sort it out’ and would ‘see her right’.” However, he then sent her a quote for $19,000 to carry out another surgery, when she had expected he would do it for little or no cost. She asked for a full refund of the initial $31,000.

Mrs A said in her complaint to the Health and Disability Commission she felt like a “financial commodity”.

“The unexpected results of this surgery have had a huge impact on my confidence and well being. [Dr B] has failed to realize this and continues to respond without genuine consideration of what impact this has had on me.

“I cannot adequately express the distress that this experience has had on myself, or my family. It has been a devastating time. I have felt devalued, disregarded and disrespected by [Dr B].”

Mrs A had further surgery performed by a different surgeon.

Dr B told the commission he did not believe a technical error was made, or that his technique or patient care was inappropriate.

Mr Hill found Dr B did not give Mrs A an adequate explanation of the options available regarding facial rejuvenation surgery, including an assessment of the expected risks, side effects, benefits and costs of each option.

She was therefore not in a position to make an informed choice and give informed consent, meaning Dr B breached her rights.

Mr Hill recommended Dr B apologize to Mrs A.

Source: nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10793161

It is interesting for me to see reports of plastic surgery from other countries. Here a woman had a pretty significant facelift which in her eyes did very little despite the high price tag.

It sounds like her doctor (who was not named) was less than adequate (by US terms anyway) in maintaining a proper medical record. He saw a patient who came from many hours away and recommended a large amount of surgery for her. When she was not pleased a year later and requested more surgery, she became angry when he wanted to charge her even more money for it. The report says the surgeon humiliated the patient, but did not provide details of this so it is hard to characterize.

The local authorities investigated and censured him, but did not return her money or accuse him of poor quality care. They recommended he apologize to her. They noted the doctor’s lack of informed consent. Medical records issues are often the easiest upon which to find fault in medical cases such as these.

You have to wonder what really happened here. In the US, the doctor’s name would have been printed whether nor not he was at fault. It seems probable that this surgeon was at the very least not the kindest man. Other than that this is a case with few facts to review. It is the lack of facts that makes it so interesting relative to a domestic case.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Reader Laura on Jaclyn Smith Surgery

Reader Laura’s Comment:

“Jaclyn Smith…looks quite youthful for someone who is reported to be 66 years old. I was wondering if you think she’s had anything done. Her lips do look a bit like she has the telltale trout pout but otherwise I think she looks great.”

At 66 years old, she looked incredibly good for her age as she was spotted leaving a beauty supply store in the city’s affluent Beverly Hills area.
Source/Pics: dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2093032/Jaclyn-Smith-
looks-unusually-youthful-steps-L-A.html

Jacyln looks good but does have a bit too much lip filler for my liking. Then again it might have just been done in which case it will settle down quickly. Lip filler tends to look a bit tweaked right after it is done even when done well. She is pretty well maintained having undoubtedly had several facelifts (well done ones) over the years as well as fillers.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Reader Question – Buccal Fat Removal

I have been considering buccal fat removal for myself. I’m in the process of researching the procedure and I was hoping you could answer a few questions for me about your office and the the buccal fat removal process.

It is funny how some surgical terms get traction on the internet and are propagated. The result is confusion as some people are led to believe that these terms represent well-established surgical procedures. This is not always the case.

Buccal fat removal is part of a facelift. It always has been. Some doctors however seeing the keywords “buccal fat removal” favorably represented on search engines have seemingly gone with the flow and written pages on it. That just reinforced the confusion.

Buccal fat is cheek fat. It can be more prominent in some people’s faces than others. Over time it tends to descend naturally to become a jowl as the ligaments of the face relax with aging. Some doctors have addressed this fat simply via liposuction which I believe can lead to inferior results in many people. Safe buccal fat removal is probably best accomplished during a facelift.

Suffice it to say if you are young with a puffy face, you might be better off leaving it alone. Being afflicted with the “round face” personally, keeping your weight down tends to help. :) If you are older, a facelift might become a reasonable alternative particularly as this fat starts to form a jowl.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Kathy Griffin – Body Looks Great

Kathy Griffin’s body really looks great despite her claims that plastic surgery hasn’t really helped:

At 47, Kathy Griffin swears she will never go under the knife again. “I’ve been off the junk, as I call it, for five years,” she says in the September issue of Fitness (out August 14). “I’ve had a face lift, eye job and all that stuff five years ago. “What I found, though, was that it didn’t help me one bit,” Griffin says. “It didn’t get me happier or didn’t make me look particularly younger.”
Source: derekhail.com/2009/05/07/kathy-griffin-in-a-bikini-isnt-as-bad-as-youd-imagine

Of course we will never know how she might have looked without it. I’d wager some body surgery ended up in there too. Sure….she looks that good and the surgery had nothing to do with it. Now that’s funny. :)

I will concede that 47 is a young for a facelift in most cases.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

Originally posted 2009-05-22 07:30:09.

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Kris Jenner Sued For Getting Facelift

Kris Jenner says the cosmetics company she endorses has NO RIGHT to sue her for getting plastic surgery back in June … because the procedure didn’t affect her face … it just tightened up some loose neck skin. The company in question — called B&P — sued Jenner earlier this week, claiming she breached a contract to endorse a line of their anti-aging skin care products … when the famous mother publicly admitted to getting a facelift. By doing so, B&P alleges, Jenner violated her agreement not to harm the reputation of the company and the product she’s endorsing — an eye care line called “Beautiful Eyes in a Bag.”

Source: tmz.com/2011/08/05/kim-kardashian-kris-jenner-surgery-facelift
-b-and-p-lawsuit-sued-keeping-up-with-the-kardashians-skin-care-
anti-aging-contract-operation-beautiful-eyes-in-a-bag/

Kris Jenner is getting sued for having a facelift. Upon reading the story, I wondered: “Who is she suing?” – but a cosmetics company is suing her! They seem to think that she negatively affected their brand when she had cosmetic surgery and was very public about it.

News to the company – The Kardashians are very public about everything!

Is it disparaging to a cosmetic company if their spokes model has cosmetic surgery? Her argument that a facelift only affects the neck is silly. It usually affects the skin of the neck and the lower two thirds of the face at least to an extent. The eyes are in that zone.

Sorry Kris.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Reader Laura on Christie Brinkley Plastic Surgery

Reader Laura’s Comment:
“Christie Brinkley is back in the news and starring in the show Chicago. The current pictures of her show her looking fab for someone who is 57. Looking at these pictures what, if anything, do you think that she has had done to her face?”


She was warned when she began modelling that her career would be over by the time she turned 30. But at 57, Christie Brinkley shows no sign of losing her Uptown Girl appeal. The mother-of-three proved she still knows how to turn heads yesterday in New York as she showed off moves from her role as Roxie in the Broadway version of musical Chicago.

Source: dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1374087/Christie-Brinkley-gives-lesson-fabulous-57-red-hot-dress.html

She looks great for 57 and has had help…very good help facially as her images have shown for years. She has really not aged much facially in decades essentially looking too good to not have had a facelift. I’d say it is likely she has had at least one facelift with eyelid surgery and a forehead lift.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Cindy Jackson and her Record 52 Plastic Surgery Operations

According to a new study, beautiful people are happier than their homely counterparts, so it’s no surprise that some people go to extreme lengths in their search for youth and beauty. Cindy Jackson is one of them. Jackson, 55, holds the world record for undergoing the most plastic surgery procedures (52 operations). During the past three decades, Cindy has had over $100,000 in cosmetic procedures, including 14 full-scale operations as well as five facelifts, two eyelid surgeries, nips, tucks, Botox and liposuction.
Source: examiner.com/celebrity-fitness-and-health-in-national/cindy-jackson-plastic-surgery-world-record-holder-refuses-to-age-gracefully

I used to feel badly about patients who had had so much surgery, but patients like Cindy Jackson seem so well adjusted I am not sure anymore. Overall she still seems to look better than she did beforehand, but how much surgery is too much? There are some surgical “artifacts” in her facial movements which are bound to be present when so much surgery has occurred.

In the big picture, five facelifts does seem like too many for a middle aged woman. Then again she is happy so who am I to take that away from her?

I went from feeling badly about these types of cases to being a bit conflicted.

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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Cheryl Tiegs Plastic Surgery

A few years ago I commented on Cheryl Tiegs and her plastic surgery experience. She has always looked good and to look this good in her sixties, a little maintenance has likely been the order of the day. She is trending again so let’s revisit what I said to the OC Register in 2008:

Plastic surgeon Dr. John Di Saia of San Clemente, however, believes Tiegs has had multiple surgeries, including one or more face lifts, nose jobs (rhinoplasties), and perhaps breast implants:

Since the seventies … I’d wager she’s had a few rhinoplasties. She has probably also had a face lift or two as her cheeks don’t seem to descend the way they should have over time.

I found a few pics online indicating that she may have had breast implants in the late seventies or early-to-mid-eighties. At that time implants were smaller and easier to hide when a lady wanted to do so. She may have had them removed in more recent times as many women of the time did.

I would advise her to take it easy on any large scale further work. Redos can be more difficult. Skin care and sun avoidance do well for all.

Source

While his sounds like a ton of work, it isn’t as it occurred over decades. She did not pull a Heidi Montag in her twenties. In comparison to the models of her time, Cheryl still looks quite good. Call me biased but it is not what you have, but how you look when it is done. Quality, timing and moderation reign king here. ;)

Best Regards,

John Di Saia MD

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