What should I pay attention to after face-lifting?
Facial lifting plastic surgery needs to be cut along the joint between the ear and the face to achieve the lifting effect. Patients are usually very concerned about scars, but they ignore that facial lifting may affect the hairline of temples and occipital bones. A good facial lift has a key and important point, which is to avoid visible scars and not change the hairline between the ears. Hairline changes in the temple and occipital bone (behind the ear). Do not change the hairline above the ear, because generally speaking, the incision of face-lifting surgery will not stay in this position. The most common hairline problem is occipital or temporal hair loss. This problem is best avoided, so there is no simple way to correct occipital hair pulling to the temporal area. No one wants to lose the right to tie their hair from behind after facial surgery. The typical facial lifting injury is in front of the ear, perpendicular to the temporal head fur. This upward pulling facial skin makes the hairline at the temple higher. This may not be a problem if the hairline of the subject's temple is low enough. But most women's temples are neither low nor long. If the bottom of the hairline just reaches the ear position, it is empty on the face. The way to avoid this problem is not to cut into the hairline vertically. Instead, a transverse cut is used when the cut between the vertical ears is close to the upper spiral part. The horizontal incision is parallel to the hair follicle along the natural hairline of the temple. Doing so usually leaves a V-shaped incision, which is a Z-shaped incision if viewed together with the vertical incision in the upper part of the ear. The rearrangement of these geometric structures destroys the tension of the suture, thus protecting the scar from being torn and widened.