Indianapolis Brow Lift doctors
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Barry L. Eppley, MD, DMD
Indianapolis Plastic Surgeon
Indiana University Health North Hospital 11725 N. Illinois Street, Suite 140, Carmel |
20 answers | |
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Mark Hamilton, MD
Indianapolis Facial Plastic Surgeon
533 E. County Line Road Suite 104, Greenwood |
1 answer | |
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Catherine Winslow, MD
Indianapolis Facial Plastic Surgeon
2000 E 116th St Suite 200, Carmel |
1 answer | |
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Joseph Fata, M.D.
Indianapolis Plastic Surgeon
10293 N. Meridian St Suite 200, Indianapolis |
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Richard Linderman, MD
Indianapolis Plastic Surgeon
12188-A North Meridian Street Suite 115, Indianapolis |
Recent Answers
I've had two and have not seen significant difference, despite using a fantastic plastic surgeon who is very skilled with great credentials. Is it possible that some people's faces are not improved with surgery because of certain types skin/muscles?
The success of browlift surgery is affected by many factors including the technique used and the anatomy of the forehead. I suspect by your description that you have had an endoscopic technique or other type of minimal incision browlift approach. These methods are prone in some cases to produce less of an effect than may be desired. After having it done twice, whatever method was used is not an effective approach for your brow needs. The effectiveness question is not whether they 'take' in any patient, but the browlift technique selected and how it was executed is.
Can You Clearly Defined the Incidence of Complications with a Brow Lift (Open Procedure)?
The complications from an open browlift include the following; permanent scalp or hairline scarring (< 5% need for scar revision), temporary or permanent numbness of the forehead and scalp (problematic permanent numbness is very rare), brow asymmetry (< 10%), overcorrection or undercorrection of the eyebrow position (< 20%) and that aging is an ongoing process that may eventually return one to their preoperative appearance years later. Overall, browlift surgery has a fairly low rate of complications that require revisional surgery.
I had a coronal browlift done about a year ago. I know it is more invasive and the old timey way but can it be reversed? The reason why i chose this as opposed to endoscopic is because i wanted a bigger forehead. Only problem now is that my brows are too high.
A browlift of any type can not be surgical reversed. This would be particularly true for any excisional type of browlift where tissue has been removed to create the elevation of the brows effect. Time eventually will make the brows drop somewhat but this is likely not as fast or as much as you would like.




