Bellevue Facelift doctors
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Richard P. Rand, MD, FACS
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
1135 116th Ave. NE Suite 630, Bellevue |
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253 answers |
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William Portuese, MD
Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
1101 Madison St Suite 1280, Seattle |
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214 answers |
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Philip Young, MD
Bellevue Facial Plastic Surgeon
1810 116th Ave. NE Suite 102, Bellevue |
81 answers | |
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Thomas A Lamperti, MD
Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
1101 Madison Street Suite 700, Seattle |
29 answers | |
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Sam Naficy, MD
Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
1110 112th Ave NE Suite 150, Bellevue |
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17 answers |
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George Marosan, MD
Bellevue Plastic Surgeon
11820 Northup Way Suite E190, Bellevue |
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13 answers |
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Lisa L. Sowder, MD
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
Suite 1650 901 Boren Avenue, Seattle |
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13 answers |
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Phillip C. Haeck, MD
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
901 Boren Ave Cabrini Medical Tower - Suite 1650 , Seattle |
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12 answers |
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Braden Stridde, MD
Federal Way Plastic Surgeon
918 S 348th St Suite B, Federal Way |
11 answers | |
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Shahram Salemy, MD
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
901 Boren Avenue Suite #1650, Seattle |
8 answers | |
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Mary Lee Peters, MD
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
901 Boren Avenue Suite 1650, Seattle |
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6 answers |
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Jeffrey E. Kyllo, MD
Seattle Plastic Surgeon
1145 Broadway, Seattle |
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5 answers |
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Samson Lee, MD
Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
1135 116th Avenue N.E. Suite 500, Bellevue |
4 answers | |
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Scott Sattler, MD
Bellevue Plastic Surgeon
2364 Fairview Ave East, Seattle |
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3 answers |
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Henri P. Gaboriau, MD
Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
22840 NE 8th St. #103, Sammamish |
2 answers |
Recent Answers
Thoughts About Having Cosmetic Surgery (Face Lift) at a Residency Program?
It is absolutely not wise to do a facelift at a residency program. These well intentioned young surgeons have no experience with this compared to a seasoned private practitioner. There is no way the result would be as good.
I've had both upper and lower eye lid surgery, arm reduction and a tummy tuck. I am a smoker and am 51 years old. I've healed fine in all cases. Why can't I have a neck or facelift?
Smoking creates two serious issues with a facelift that are not present in other operations. Smokers have a higher carbon monoxide component in their bloodstream, which preferentially binds to red blood cells so that oxygen cannot get to the tissues. The second component is nicotine, a vasoconstrictor, which further compromises the delivery of oxygen to the tissues. Simply put, the skin around the incision can slough and die due to smoking. This is why most surgeons will not perform a facelift on smokers.
Hi i have a skeletal and dental defect which are both 2mm to the left will that affect the result of a facelift?
A 2 mm skeletal and dental defect is probably not enough to significantly affect results from a facelift.













