Face — surgical planning shaped by anatomy
Facial surgery in this practice is planned around anatomy, proportion, structural balance, and procedural fit. Each procedure addresses a different type of concern, and the appropriate approach depends on individual assessment rather than a fixed formula.
Structural reshaping of the nose using a technique selected according to anatomy and surgical goals.
→Upper and lower eyelid surgery to address excess skin, fat, or structural change around the eye according to the pattern of ageing and underlying anatomy.
→Surgical rejuvenation of the lower face and neck for tissue descent, contour change, and jawline-neck transition concerns.
→Ear reshaping to correct prominence, asymmetry, or contour issues through a procedure planned according to ear shape, proportion, and symmetry.
→Autologous fat transfer to restore or refine facial volume, either as a standalone procedure or alongside broader facial surgery.
→Selected facial procedures that may be performed alone or in support of a broader surgical plan where additional refinement is appropriate.
→Structural lateral eyelid support considered where lid tone, position, or periorbital balance calls for a more defined surgical approach.
→Hairline lowering to reduce visible forehead height and improve upper-face proportion in properly selected candidates.
→Not every facial concern is solved with one procedure
Surgical planning for the face is not about choosing from a list. It depends on anatomy, priorities, procedural fit, and sometimes restraint. In some patients, one procedure is sufficient. In others, the appropriate result depends on combination, sequence, or deliberately limiting scope.