Blog

April 17, 2009

Revision Rhinoplasty

Filed under: Rhinoplasty — Tags: , , , — Dr. Edward D. Buckingham, M.D. @ 9:33 am

Sarah,

The columella is made up of what is called the medial crural footplates.  These are part of the cartilage that makes up the tip of the nose and is intimately involved in all aspects of tip rotation and projection as well as the amount of nostril show.  The part you are referring to hanging.  The columella as well as the nasal tip dimensions can all be precisely controlled in rhinoplasty by placing grafts onto the nasal septum and suturing the medial crura to this graft in what is referred to as a tongue and groove fashion.  We routinely use this type of maneuver in primary and revision rhinoplasty to achieve the appropriate tip dimensions.  Please take some time to review our rhinoplasty photo gallery.  I think you will get a good feel for what words have a hard time expressing.  Please feel free to call with any further questions.

Ed Buckingham


1 Comment »

  1. Hi,
    Do you use digital imaging during your rhinoplasty consults? Could you elaborate on what this means?
    Thanks,
    Wendy

    Comment by Wendy — April 21, 2009 @ 2:56 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Dr. Edward Buckingham is a Board Certified Facial Plastic Surgeon who specializes in Rhinopalsty, Facelifts, Eyelid Surgery, BOTOX, and many other
Cosmetic Facial procedures. His office is located in Austin, Texas and services the surrounding areas including: Sunset Valley, West Lake Hills, Cedar Park,
Round Rock, and many of the other nearby Texas cities. © 2008 Austin Texas Facial Plastic Surgery

Email Page to a friend Map It Videos Patient Forms Contact Us News FAQs BLOGs Patient testimonials Photos Procedures About Us Home Contact Us Forms & Resources Privacy Policy Mission Statement Texas Facial Plastic Surgeon