Nasal Surgery: What Women Really Want for their Men

"A woman kept awake by a snoring mate covers her head with the pillow and screams for quiet"

Snoring: NOT what she wants!

Even before Sigmund Freud asked that question, human behavior experts were asking: “What do women really want, especially in bed?”

Well, how about this: a good night’s sleep?

Jet engine level noise from snoring husbands often wrecks wives’ sound sleep. But it’s not thoughtless hubbies: a common nasal condition is often the bugbear. Here’s what happens:

Many guys play rough sports and sustain broken noses that are often left untreated. The result is often a deviated septum, the thin partition separating the two nostrils. Or, the hapless guy could just be born with the bent septum. In any case, the result is snoring.

While there are other causes, many also have enlarged turbinates in the upper airway.

(Turbinates?  They warm, humidify and filter air.)

Sometimes, allergies will make the turbinates swell, blocking the airway and causing the man to saw the logs all night long.

Here’s where things go off track. Somehow, some way, the hapless sinuses became the fall guy. Actually, if a person, man or woman, complains of sinus woe, it’s usually because the sinuses are reacting to the nasal blockages mentioned above. True sinusitis is fairly uncommon, actually. (Post continued below.)

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Left, the young man below shows the state of his nose after multiple nasal injuries. Rhinoplasty not only improved the appearance of the nose, but cleared his nasal passages for quiet, healthy breathing.

"A young man shows his surgically repaired nose after many sports injuries"

Rhinoplasty, Before (left) and After

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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(Continued from above.)Then, many sufferers take a wrong turn and stampede for the corner drug store where they collectively buy a literal ocean of “sinus preparations” alleged to cure the following ailments, among others:

  • Post-nasal drip
  • Sinus headaches
  •     “    pressure
  •     “    pain
  • Dental devices that supposedly open the airway
  • Neti Pots

Many of the snoring masses are even assigned to wear CPAP (continuous, positive air pressure) machines nightly. The devices force air through the nose and into the lungs.

Lacking a CPAP, the snorer may become a mouth breather which leads to a separate set of medical misfortunes. He’s also likely to develop sleep apnea which involves waking many times at night, gasping for any air at all. And that could have dire cardiac consequences.

Collectively, about 48 million Americans are involved for one reason or another.

Nonetheless, a relatively easy, quick and real solution exists, giving women what they want while creating a more healthy — and former — snorer.

The solution? Starting with a thorough inspection inside the nose by a board-certified ENT (Ears, Nose and Throat specialist who is often a cosmetic plastic surgeon,) correction of:

  • A bent or deviated septum
  • Turbinate reduction

Dr. Kotler: Ranked by MapQuest as #5 out of 500 medical & health professionals in Beverly Hills’ “Golden Triangle”

Nose Surgery and Cocaine

"A woman's nose nd mouth are shown in closeup in profile"

Cocaine: No Entry!

It’s not on the list of nasal surgeries that we perform, but the phrase, “Cocaine Nose Job” now appears on Facebook and is listed in the Urban Dictionary.

The phrase is often bandied about by people who describe themselves as “recreational drug users.”

Unfortunately, it’s sad choice of recreation — the effects of cocaine on the entire body are not good. Worst of all is what coke does to your blood vessels and heart. Cocaine is a stimulant that increases blood pressure to dangerously high levels and can vastly increase the chances of death or stroke.

Just after or before rhinoplasty, using coke is the worst thing you could do; the cocaine reduces blood supply and oxygen to the healing nose, can cause the loss of the nasal lining (the mucosa)  and could lead to collapse of the nose.

Problems develop and continue from coke’s first use. Having seen the results of cocaine use, we can tell you the following woes are apparent:

  • An irritated, inflamed nasal interior which prevents any safe nose procedure like a nose job, revision rhinoplasty or deviated septum surgery
  • A hole in the septum, the paper-thin wall of cartilage and bone that separates the two nostrils. (Read more about septum surgery.)

That hole results in crusting, bleeding and whistling with each breath. Medically known as a nasal septal perforation, it can range in size from the point of a ballpoint pen to about the diameter of a nickel. (Blog post continues, below.)

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The patient below shows on the left the unsatisfying result of a rhinoplasty done elsewhere. But a procedure to sculpt and refine her nasal tip brings out and complements her other elegant facial features. (The patient was not a cocaine abuser.) Photo: Robert Kotler, M.D.

"A beautiful woman shows the result of having tip surgery on her nose."
Before, left, and after sculpted tip (Robert Kotler, M.D. photo.)
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Moreover, it’s difficult for a plastic surgeon to close that hole during surgery. One method: using a medical plastic plug to plug the perforation. But somebody who has abused coke for many years will probably have continuing problems.

Yet another danger rears its ugly head when a patient has cocaine in his or her system during any surgery. Cocaine, anesthetic drugs and a local anesthetic could have the worst possible outcome.

To cope: be completely open with your cosmetic plastic surgeon, set embarrassment aside and reveal all substances you ingest. Your surgeon is not there to judge; his or her purpose is to keep you safe before, during and after surgery.

According to patient confidentiality laws, your doctor cannot reveal anything about your medical history (or condition) without your permission.

Dr. Kotler: Ranked by MapQuest as #5 out of 500 medical & health professionals in Beverly Hills’ “Golden Triangle”

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Rhinoplasty: Another Ethnic Group Wants Better Noses

"Blooywood actor and actress heat up the action for the camera"

Bollywood Action

If rhinoplasty weren’t already the most difficult cosmetic plastic surgery, yet another wrinkle has cropped up in the art and science of performing ethnic nose jobs.

Various U.S. ethnicities crave better noses that fit their faces and flatter their profiles. But, at the same time, those patients want to keep their ethnic identities. For instance, African-American patients may want a less wide nose but they do not want the slim nose typically appearing on a Northern European background person. (Read more about ethnic rhinoplasty.)

So good cosmetic plastic surgeons tread carefully and are well studied in what exactly makes an ethnically appropriate nose. In North American, that means knowing the facial characteristics of:

  • Asians
  • Anglo-Saxons
  • African-Americans
  • Hispanics

Now, a new group has been studied. Writing in the current issue of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, a medical journal for plastic surgeons, three cosmetic plastic surgeons studied the nose job requests of Americans with roots in India.

The traditional emphasis in India has been on “internal beauty” (READ: never mind what a nose looks like.) And then the influence of “Bollywood”, the center of films in India, started more people thinking about their appearance. According to the article, India-based plastic surgeons counted 60,000 cosmetic rhinoplasties in 2009.

When more people born in India moved to the United States — and came under the influence of Hollywood beauty standards — the trickle of interest in better noses became a tidal wave.

Three plastic surgeons studied 35 Indian-American women who were unhappy with their noses. Results? A large majority wanted nasal humps flattened. They also complained of nasal tips that pointed down, especially when smiling or a nose that was just too large.

These subjects also wanted to preserve their ethnic identities; but fewer requested reduction of wide nostrils; one patient who wanted only slightly more narrow nostrils brought in the before and after rhinoplasty pictures of an African-American woman who also had very slight nostril reduction.

Another subject, 28, asked for a hump reduction. But the cosmetic surgeon, while examining her nose, found a deviated septum which blocked her breathing.

So, like many American nose job patients, she had septoplasty and cosmetic rhinoplasty in one surgical session.

Results? She breathed better and looked better.

(The patient, below, allowed her full beauty to come through by removing the hump on her nose.)

"A lovely woman shows the difference a bump removal from her nose makes"

Hump Removal

Nose Surgery Can Mean Better CPAP Breathing

"Two medical professionals give a lovely young woman a nasal exam"

Nasal Exam

Regular readers of our blog posts already know a CPAP is a face mask and machine for people who snore, often due to problems inside the nose that block healthy breathing.

But, as a curious cosmetic plastic surgeon, we also scan forums and bulletin boards for news about CPAP (which stands for “continuous positive air pressure,” a fancy way of saying “forcing air into your lungs through your nose”.)

So we note some users have found that nasal surgery makes their CPAP work even better.

The basic start of all this is raw snoring….ear-splitting, freight train decibel, nocturnal snoring that makes the bedroom curtains flap in the breeze and can be heard downstairs, if not the next house.  Pity the sleep-robbed mates of snorers.

Snoring can have many causes but some of the most common are:

  • A deviated septum
  • Swollen turbinates, structures higher up in the nose

A septum is the thin wall of cartilage that separates your two nostrils. When bent, twisted or otherwise deformed, they can block the breathing channels in the nose.

Turbinates warm and humidify the air you breathe. But they often react to allergies and other conditions by swelling, again blocking healthy, quiet breathing.

Curious about the numbers of healthy and blocked breathers, The University of Washington’s Sleep Disorders Center studied 306 CPAP users for two years. They wanted to find why some did not wear the CPAP mask regularly. (Read more about nose surgery and CPAP use.)

After exams, 108 patients showed abnormal nasal exams and were also the same group who did not use the mask correctly, if at all. The study authors concluded patients with abnormal nasal exams had decreased CPAP use and tolerance.

Concluded the authors: why not treat nasal conditions before prescribing a CPAP?

Yet another study at the Stanford Sleep Disorders and Research Center in Palo Alto, California, found that turbinate treatments, when appropriate, appear to benefit nasal obstruction and ease the breathing of CPAP users.

But before you say “yes” to a CPAP, ask yourself if any medical professional has actually looked up into your nose to see and diagnose the state of your nose and if its internal architecture allows for easy, quiet breathing.

Perhaps that would be the best first step possible!

Septoplasty & Turbinate Reduction Patients Speak

"A  beautiful woman shows only her nose and lips"

The function of the nose: to breathe

If you read plastic surgery bulletin boards and forums dedicated to people who have trouble breathing, you’ll discover that the real cause of their breathing woe is usually a surprise.

For instance, Kilgore T. writes: “I just had too many episodes of Afrin addiction due to swollen turbinates.”

(Background: turbinates are bony, flesh-covered structures high inside the nose. Turbinates often react to allergies and other “insults” by swelling and blocking healthy breathing.)

Afrin shrinks nasal tissues but has bothersome side effects like keeping you up all night because it’s an upper and causing mens’ sensitive tissues to swell.

The proposed solution to bugbear breathing: turbinate reduction surgery. Kilgore asks fellow bad breathing sufferers to:

Kilgore’s headline was: “Nose Surgery – CPAP usage and effect on apneas?” He’s asking if he would breathe well.

(Yet more background: CPAP, short for Continuous Positive Air Pressure is a machine that forces air through the nose and into the lungs; a CPAP is worn in bed at night.

Read more about CPAP and nose surgery.

Squid13 tossed in his two cents worth: “I had the surgery…they packed my nose with gauze for a couple of days and then removed it…in four to six weeks (the nose) good as new and boy did my breathing improve…make sure you go to a doctor who knows what he is doing, as too much turbinate reduction can lead to very deleterious results, i.e. empty nose syndrome.”

Added SleepingUgly: “I had septoplasty and turbinate reduction. It had great benefits to me (sic) in terms of being able to breathe through my nose…I have even gotten less sinus infections since the surgery.”

Commented Kitatonic: “(my doctor) stated nasal surgery should be done if the goal is to improve your daytime breathing.”

But Dale92 put a nice cap on Kilgore T.’s question: Pens Dale: “I had turbinate reduction on my right side and my deviated septum fixed in 2004. Before this, I was unable to breathe through my nose for most of my life except for periods of Afrin use which caused even more problems. Finally, I was able to breathe!…Like I said, it was the best thing I had ever done to improve my health…I would gladly do the surgery again.”

You can also have a cosmetic nose job during the same procedure.

(Read the internal nose surgery comments in full.)

Nasal Surgery to Ditch a CPAP Machine

"A haggard, sleep deprived man is shown wearing his CPAP mask with the tubing around his neck"

CPAP User

If your eye caught the headline on this post, you are probably either a CPAP (Continuous Positive Air Pressure) user or your bed mate is one.

Joked one 50-something CPAP user after having internal nose surgery: “Only my ex-wife thought the CPAP was great; she considered it an anti-adultery device!”

You must admit, the typical CPAP user going to bed, like the guy above, looks like he (or she, in fewer cases) is ready for high altitude flight or suffers from some strange breathing disorder.

For those who don’t know, a CPAP forces air through the nose into the lungs. The device is diagnosed when a person snores loudly, depriving the body’s organs of enough oxygen. (And we mean ALL the organs!)

But in the vast majority of cases, an internal nose blockage causes the snoring. Fix the block and ditch the CPAP machine.

Of course, snoring can be cause by other health woes, including:

  • Enlarged tongue
  • Short, receding lower jaw
  • Huge tonsils
  • Enlarged palate or uvula, that bit of worm-like flesh dangling in the back of the throat

A common blockage is a bent septum, the thin wall of cartilage separating the nostrils. A deviated septum often rambles from one side to the other, restricting airflow.

Another major red warning flag: enlarged turbinates, bony, flesh-covered structures higher in the nose that swell in reaction to allergies and other unknown reasons. Solution? Trim the turbinates to ensure good airflow.

If you:

  •    Snore
  •    Suffer frequent sinus infections
  •    Have allergy attacks or
  •    Use a CPAP

ask yourself: when is the last time a doctor looked up into your nose? It seems like an elementary course of action but it rarely happens for whatever reasons.

Here’s another hint: top nasal surgeons say that healthy breathing is quiet breathing. If you can close one or the other nostril and, with your lips firmly sealed, hear noise while breathing through that one nostril, you may be a candidate for internal nasal surgery.

A competent nasal surgeon (who is also usually a cosmetic plastic surgeon) can perform the internal nose surgery you need, with or without a cosmetic rhinoplasty.

Concluded our pal from above whose wife though he looked not-so-sexy in his CPAP mask:

“My new partner tells me I sleep quietly and soundly; the CPAP mask and machine now sit off-duty, in its bag in a dusty corner of the garage.”

"A man is shown before and after cosmetic rhinoplasty

Before and After Rhinoplasty and Internal Nasal Surgery for Better Breathing

Broken Noses, Athletes and Hard Play

"Detroit Pistol basketball player Rip Hamilton is shown in his nose guard mask"

"Rip Hamilton and Nose Guard Mask

Now that the long-delayed NBA season is under way, we can’t help but notice at least one hard-charging basketball player who has been plagued with broken noses.

Rip Hamilton of the Detroit Pistons suffered three broken noses before he started wearing a hockey mask in the 2003-04 seasons.

Hamilton now wears a specially made nose protector (known as a “Rip Mask”) which has spurred calls from all over the globe. One 50-year-old guy in Hawaii addicted to pickup basketball games traveled to Detroit just to be fitted for one. A plaster cast of your face is necessary to get a “Rip Mask” nose guard.

(Look at ten other professional basketball players who wear masks due a once broken nose.)

Actually, a broken nose is the most common facial injury and a special bogeyman to all professional athletes who can’t – especially during an abbreviated season – take six weeks off, waiting for a broken schnozzle to heal.

Too often, an athlete decides to just tough it out. Then, the broken bones heal in place, usually creating a crooked or bent nose. That only doubles the athlete’s (and the plastic surgeon’s!) woe because breathing problems are created when air can’t move freely through the nose to the lungs.

Most people with a broken nose on the mend do not require a protective mask unless, like our basketball playing pal from Hawaii, a chance of hard contact to the nose is at hand.

The same rules apply during most cosmetic nasal surgeries. For instance, in order to narrow a nose, the bones must be realigned. Usually, the plastic surgeon uses instruments inside the nose to release the nose from its attachments and then, with the fingers, moves the bones into the desired position. In six weeks, the nose becomes fully healed.

Of course, there are no worries for the patient who does not plan on any:

  • Boxing matches
  • Getting in the way of swinging elbows attached to seven-foot athletes

Why so many broken noses? Among others, your nose is:

  • The most prominent object on your face
  • Nasal bones are the body’s thinnest and most delicate

How do you know if the nose is really broken? Look for some, or all, of the following symptoms:

  • Swelling
  • Sore to touch
  • Bruises under the eyes
  • Bleeding from the nose
  • A different nasal shape
  • Breathing is different

Usually, a broken nose must be attended to within 10 days. After that, the various parts of the nose start to knit together whatever position they are sitting.

(Look at some before and after nasal surgery pictures)

Nasal Surgery & CPAP Machines

"A bald man is shown sleeping in his CPAP mask"

CPAP User Sleeping

We recently traveled by air and were herded through airport security with some basic items piled into those cafeteria-like bus boy carts for passage through inspection, including:

  • Our shoes
  • Pants that drooped to our knees due to no belt
  • Our delicate, pricey laptop

We also noticed that quite a few men, who appeared over 50, had taken apart their CPAP (Continuous Positive Air Pressure) machines for inspection.

A CPAP is a small pump-like machine and face mask, used while sleeping. A CPAP forces air down the nose through a strap-on mask and into the lungs of a snoring person. Usually, a diagnosis of sleep apnea goes hand-in-hand.

Sleep apnea causes breathing to stop altogether and the person to wake momentarily.

Result? The CPAP puts plenty of oxygen into lungs and vital organs, allowing more rest. Bonus result: wives love the quiet that comes with no more snoring….once they get used to the whispering of the CPAP.

Thus, many who use CPAP machines have a blocked nose….. but don’t know it. The question is whether or not their blocked nose can be surgically repaired.

Many conditions may also cause snoring and sleep apnea, including:

  • A thick or short neck
  • An upper palate and or uvula (that worm-like extension that hangs down into the throat, above the back of the tongue) that needs reduction
  • An unrepaired broken nose
  • Deviated nasal septum, possibly from injury
  • Enlarged nasal turbinates, sometimes the result of nasal allergies

After having seen over 4,000 patients for nasal surgery, we’ve noticed that many structures inside the nose that can cause:

  • Snoring
  • Blocked sinuses with a head cold or allergy attack
  • Bonafide sinus infection, a serious condition,  requiring antibiotics and sometimes surgical intervention

One patient complained of loud snoring; when we looked into his nose and throat, we saw a huge uvula, hanging way down into the lower throat, swinging back and forth with each breath.

Result? Removing the uvula quelled the snoring. (Don’t worry, the uvula has no function; you can do nicely without it.)

Several key structures inside the nose need to be evaluated.

  • The septum, the thin, vertical wall separating the two nasal passages
  • The turbinates, shelf-like structures that warm, humidify and filter the incoming air.

If the septum has been broken and is crooked, it blocks incoming air.

The turbinates and nasal lining can swell due to cold viruses or allergies and contribute to reduced air flow through the nose.

A relatively short nasal procedure – done with or without cosmetic rhinoplasty – can:

  • Correct breathing
  • Stop the sleep apnea and
  • Remove the need for a CPAP

Major hint: if your nose looks bent or crooked on the outside, it is also probably crooked on the inside as well. And not likely to allow normal breathing.

Without having to lug around that CPAP machine, just imagine how nice it would be to have one hand free to hold up your drooping trousers while going through airport security!

Rhinoplasty & Bullying

"A bigger boy grabs a smaller child and tries to get his lunch money"

Childhood bullying

Last night, (October 11th) Nightline carried the story of Nicolette Taylor, a 13-year-old who been bullied, because of her nose which was broken at ages two and eight. She recently had a nose job to deflect the online and in-person bullies.
(Watch the Nightline plastic surgery segment).

While many decry children having plastic surgery, insisting that more effort should be put on stifling bullies. But the reality is: children and teens will routinely belittle and tease any child that looks even slightly different.

Consider the case of large, standout ears on a child. In all likelihood, that child will acquire the cruel moniker “Dumbo”. That usually causes the youngster to crawl into a shell and direct all his or her attention to the meanness in his life. Education becomes a distant concern.

That’s why most psychologists, educators and other professionals recommend pinning the child’s large ears back – in a surgical procedure known as otoplasty—before starting school at age five.

Likewise, a teen boy with big breasts – medically known as gynecomastia – has a tough row to hoe. Boys and girls will tease, ridicule and shame the lad for his feminine-looking chest. The cruelest cut of all: “No girl wants a boyfriend who has bigger boobs than her!” In many cases, the answer is male breast reduction performed by a plastic surgeon.

“Fair or unfair, we are judged by the way we look,” says Nicolette’s New York City plastic surgeon, Sam Rizk, MD, FACS.

Cosmetic plastic surgeons operating on teens want to know if:
• The teen really wants the surgery for him or herself
• A parent is pushing the child into surgery
• The teen is mature enough to comprehend and carry outpost-op recovery steps

According to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS), rhinoplasty is O.K. when a nose has completed 90 percent of its growth. In girls, that can be 13 or 14.

Additionally, Nicolette worked as a child model and, post-surgery, is now attractive enough to model more.

To show the difference a cosmetic surgery can make in a youngster’s appearance, note the change in the teen pictured below. Her stand out ears made her an immediate target for teasing, ridiculing and bullying. But in the after picture, she has a more normal appearance which is important to teens because one of the leading desires at that time of life is fitingt into their peer group. Said one 14-year-old after otoplasty: “I wished I had not waited so long!” (After picture taken three months after procedure.)

"A 14 year old girl is shown wth large ears and then with surgically pinned back ears in her after picture"

Otoplasty, Before and After

 

Nose Jobs of the Rich and Famous: Vienna Girardi

"Vienna Girardi is shown at the L.A. Airport with a bandaged nose"

After Rhinoplasty

Bachelor Pad’s Vienna Girardi (left) was pictured in late July at Los Angeles International Airport looking black and blue under and around the eyes. She made no secret of her July 15th rhinoplasty and wore a bandage over her recently rejuvenated nose.

A mere three weeks later, on August 8th, Vienna was back on the job at the start of Bachelor Pad’s second season. About ten million people tune in for each episode of Bachelor, Bachelor Pad and The Bachelorette.

News reports have Vienna traveling from Los Angeles to Texas for her rhinoplasty. Of course, excellent plastic surgeons are found everywhere. But considering that Beverly Hills is usually considered the world Mecca of plastic surgery due to its large concentration of cosmetic plastic surgeons and nearby world class  teaching institutions, going from L.A. to Texas for a nose job is something like being in Newcastle without coal and traveling 1000 miles to bring the coal back to Newcastle.

Vienna’s new nose fits her face but she could have considered one thing about plastic surgeons: the surgeon who specializes in only five or six procedures will complete the surgery with less fuss and bother because he or she has done it so many times. For the patient, that means less bruising and swelling because the highly specialized surgeon disturbs less tissue. And that also means faster healing for the patient.

Vienna is widely quoting as saying she always felt like she had a potato-head nose” and that she wanted to have rhinoplasty since she was nine or 10 years old. As with many school kids, there was cruel teasing and name calling, too; her nick-name was “Pinocchio”.

During her first TV appearances, bloggers favored the not-so-flattering, “horse-face”. So Vienna’s reasons are completely valid for having nasal rejuvenation surgery. In addition, any TV or movie actress knows the face can be the fortune.

According to news reports, Vienna had a nasal hump removed and the tip of her nose shortened.

A sense of self-confidence usually follows such procedures. Sure enough, Vienna tweeted about her surgery, “If it makes you feel better about yourself, DO IT.”

What do you think?

"A closeup shows the head and shoulders of Vienna Girardi"

After Nose Job

"A closeup shows the face and long nose of Vienna Girardi"

Before Rhinoplasty