Facelifts Hold Up Years Later

Face Lift Patients Keep Looking Younger Years After SurgeryA new study from the UK and Scotland shows that more than five years after patients undergo a facelift procedure, three-fourths of them still look younger than they did before the surgery.

Even though some areas of the patient’s face showed some signs of aging, a range of assessments showed long lasting results, according to Dr. Barry M. Jones of King Edward VII Hospital in London and Steven J. Lo of Canniesburn Plastic Surgery Unit in Glasgow.

In a statement Lo and Jones said of the study, “This study provides strong evidence that facelift surgery can provide significant long-term aesthetic gains.”

How The Facelift Study Was Done

The researchers of the study standardized the photographs of 50 patients and analyzed them using three sets of measurements to determine how well the results maintained over time:

  • The angle of the chin in association with the neck, as well as the patient’s jowl height.
  • Key areas like the lines from the patient’s mouth to chin or lines from the nose to the mouth were subjectively analyzed.
  • Finally, an overall subjective assessment of the patient’s physical features were taken into account.

The average length of time between the surgery and the study analysis for the patients involved in the study was around five and a half years.

The study is scheduled to be published in December and found that all three measurement metrics of the study showed significant improvement over pre-operative results. Even though some patients experienced some loss of improvement in their facial appearance after their facelift, the majority continued to look younger.

Jones and Lo wrote, “Scoring suggested that 76 percent of patients would still look younger five and a half years after a facelift than they did prior to the facelift.”

If you’re interested in exploring or learning more about the available facial cosmetic surgery options, contact Dr. Mark Mandell-Brown online, or at his Cincinnati, Ohio location.

Source: UPI

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