Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice

Background:. Patients seeking a pan-facial rejuvenation may not receive appropriate medical advice on surgical versus nonsurgical treatments, resulting in those who are best-suited for surgery receiving nonsurgical options, and vice versa. Patients who requested total-face, nonsurgical revitalizatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Niamh Corduff, MBBS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer 2023-10-01
Series:Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open
Online Access:http://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/10.1097/GOX.0000000000005318
_version_ 1827780734492868608
author Niamh Corduff, MBBS
author_facet Niamh Corduff, MBBS
author_sort Niamh Corduff, MBBS
collection DOAJ
description Background:. Patients seeking a pan-facial rejuvenation may not receive appropriate medical advice on surgical versus nonsurgical treatments, resulting in those who are best-suited for surgery receiving nonsurgical options, and vice versa. Patients who requested total-face, nonsurgical revitalization were surveyed to understand the factors influencing this decision-making. Methods:. Patients consulting for total facial rejuvenation were surveyed on their reasons for seeking nonsurgical versus surgical interventions by an investigator with 30 years of plastic surgery experience, practicing in a nonsurgical clinic alongside a dermatologist and aesthetic physician. Results:. Of the 92 patients surveyed, 78% completed the survey, 47% of whom had considered facelift surgery, and 14% of whom proceeded to inquiries or consultations with a plastic surgeon about facelift surgery. All respondents were women, and age was not an exclusion factor. Forty-four percent would still consider facelifts in later life. Among the most common reasons for choosing nonsurgical approaches were a desire for natural and subtle results, cost, having flexibility in treatment choice, concerns about surgical and anesthesia risks, downtime, the ability to distribute treatments over time, and scarring. Conclusions:. Many patients book nonsurgical treatments without prior professional advice, and consider these as a temporary solution, but may desire surgery later in life. Before conducting nonsurgical treatments, doctors should identify this group and avoid interventions that may interfere with optimal surgical outcomes later. Also, some patients desire surgical outcomes when surgery is not a feasible option, and thus seek nonsurgical alternatives. For this group, realistic goals must be set before treatment to avoid disappointment.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T15:08:18Z
format Article
id doaj.art-db8652e5cd75499c83212459b78c65ee
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2169-7574
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T15:08:18Z
publishDate 2023-10-01
publisher Wolters Kluwer
record_format Article
series Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open
spelling doaj.art-db8652e5cd75499c83212459b78c65ee2023-10-30T03:42:31ZengWolters KluwerPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open2169-75742023-10-011110e531810.1097/GOX.0000000000005318202310000-00001Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ ChoiceNiamh Corduff, MBBS0From the Cosmetic Refinement Clinic, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.Background:. Patients seeking a pan-facial rejuvenation may not receive appropriate medical advice on surgical versus nonsurgical treatments, resulting in those who are best-suited for surgery receiving nonsurgical options, and vice versa. Patients who requested total-face, nonsurgical revitalization were surveyed to understand the factors influencing this decision-making. Methods:. Patients consulting for total facial rejuvenation were surveyed on their reasons for seeking nonsurgical versus surgical interventions by an investigator with 30 years of plastic surgery experience, practicing in a nonsurgical clinic alongside a dermatologist and aesthetic physician. Results:. Of the 92 patients surveyed, 78% completed the survey, 47% of whom had considered facelift surgery, and 14% of whom proceeded to inquiries or consultations with a plastic surgeon about facelift surgery. All respondents were women, and age was not an exclusion factor. Forty-four percent would still consider facelifts in later life. Among the most common reasons for choosing nonsurgical approaches were a desire for natural and subtle results, cost, having flexibility in treatment choice, concerns about surgical and anesthesia risks, downtime, the ability to distribute treatments over time, and scarring. Conclusions:. Many patients book nonsurgical treatments without prior professional advice, and consider these as a temporary solution, but may desire surgery later in life. Before conducting nonsurgical treatments, doctors should identify this group and avoid interventions that may interfere with optimal surgical outcomes later. Also, some patients desire surgical outcomes when surgery is not a feasible option, and thus seek nonsurgical alternatives. For this group, realistic goals must be set before treatment to avoid disappointment.http://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/10.1097/GOX.0000000000005318
spellingShingle Niamh Corduff, MBBS
Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open
title Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
title_full Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
title_fullStr Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
title_full_unstemmed Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
title_short Surgical or Nonsurgical Facial Rejuvenation: The Patients’ Choice
title_sort surgical or nonsurgical facial rejuvenation the patients choice
url http://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/10.1097/GOX.0000000000005318
work_keys_str_mv AT niamhcorduffmbbs surgicalornonsurgicalfacialrejuvenationthepatientschoice