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Forehead Lift

A forehead lift is a cosmetic surgery procedure that elevates a drooping eyebrow and removes deep worry lines that run across the forehead and may portray expressions of anger, sternness, hostility, fatigue or other unintended emotions to others. Patients commonly request forehead rejuvenation surgery because the area comprises the major focal and expression point of the upper face, the eyes notwithstanding. Given time and gravity, muscles that hold the forehead smooth become loose and weak, causing deep wrinkles to appear. Correcting a wrinkled forehead usually leads to a more youthful look. Patients that request the procedure range in age from 40 to 60. A forehead lift in combination with eyelid surgery reduces sagging skin found on the upper eyelids. There are multiple surgical approaches for a forehead lift. A direct brow lift involves removing an ellipse of skin and muscle just above the eyebrows. Doctors hide the incision within the hairline. This technique does not address wrinkles or lines within the forehead and surgical scars may be prominent after the procedure. Older patients, mostly men with thick eyebrow hair, request this procedure to address male pattern baldness. Doctors suggest a mid-forehead lift for patients older than 65 who have heavy sagging eyebrows and the deepest forehead wrinkles. To bring about a more youthful look, the surgeon makes incisions within the deep forehead wrinkles and removes the excess skin, fat and muscle. The doctor hides incisions within the deep wrinkles so that the resulting scars are not very noticeable after healing. A coronal forehead lift involves an ear-to-ear incision across the forehead and elevates the entire forehead and brow. The most modern technique, an endoscopic forehead lift, involves a surgical telescope that elevates the brows and smoothes forehead wrinkles through small incisions made behind the hairline.

Q: Will insurance cover plastic surgery procedures? A: There is a distinction between cosmetic and reconstructive surgery. Most insurance do not cover cosmetic surgery to reshape normal structures in order to improve the appearance and self-esteem of a patient. Insurance covers reconstructive procedures on abnormal structures on the body caused by birth defect, cancer, trauma, infection or disease. More Plastic Surgery Questions



Other Resources
Cervicoplasty - Cervicoplasty is the medical term for a neck lift or neck rejuvenation procedure. There are different types of cervicoplasty. The simplest cervicoplasty involves tightening only the platysmal muscle.
Breast Implant Pain Breast implant replacement surgery is increasing in incidence as more women undergo breast augmentation annually. Research studies on implant replacement have identified factors which increase the likelihood for breast implant replacement. Implant Capsule Research studies on implant replacement have identified factors which increase the likelihood for breast implant replacement. Some of the variables studied in breast implant replacement include: age of the breast implants, breast type, breast implant size, technique for insertion of the breast implants, or patient age. breast capsule Insurance coverage varies by state and plan. Most insurance plans do not cover an elective capsulectomy procedure for Grade II capsular contracture with only a palpable firmness of the implants. Capsular Contracture IV - Stage four capsular contracture describes a breast implant, which is firm to touch with visible breast deformity and, most importantly, breast pain. Stage 4 capsular contracture can occur anytime after breast augmentation. Patients may experience a firm breast implant from one week to a few decades after breast augmentation surgery.
Capsular Contracture III - Stage three capsular contracture describes a breast implant, which is firm to touch with visible breast deformity. Stage III capsular contracture can occur anytime after breast augmentation. Patients may experience a firm breast implant from one week to a few decades after breast augmentation surgery.
Capsular Contracture II - Stage two capsular contracture describes a breast implant, which is firm to touch without any visible abnormalities. Stage II capsular contracture can occur anytime after your breast implant surgery. You may experience a firm breast implant from one week to a few decades after breast augmentation surgery.
Capsular Contracture I - Stage one capsular contracture is essentially a normally soft breast implant. There are no signs of any breast implant hardening. The breast implant can move comfortably inside the breast implant pocket. Breasts are not painful and not tender to touch. Visible or palpable ripping of the breast implant shell may be present.
Silicone Gel Bleed - Silicone can leak out of the implant without an obvious rupture of the shell. A slow silicone leak occurs through an intact shell.
Silicone Breast Implant Bleed - Liquid silicone or silicone gel can bleed or leak out of an intact breast implant shell. A silicone gel bleed is only present with silicone implants and an MRI can diagnose a leak.
Browplasty - Browplasty denotes plastic surgery on the eyebrows. A browplasty lifts eyebrows to rejuvenate the face. Aging causes the entire body to droop or gravitate downward. A female browplasty lifts the eyebrows to a naturally youthful position.
Breast Reduction Complications - Beyond the complication of any breast surgery such as infection, pain, and bleeding, breast reduction complications include loss of shape, re-growth of breast tissue, loss of nipple sensation, and the inability to breastfeed.
Breast Lift Complications - Breast lifts can results wide or raised scars, altered nipple sensation, asymmetry in breasts, and enlarged areolas.