It is important to perform the procedure that fits the anatomy and the expectations, not the other way around. Too often a "standard" procedure is performed without customizing it ,or modifying it or the patient's expectations, to accompany the anatomical realities. Skin quality is variable for sure, but if a patient's skin is "bad", the procedure should take some of that into consideration. Skin might be "thick", or "thin", have lost elasticity, or is prone to hyperpigmentation or hypertrophic scars, but it does not usually cause lumpiness, pulled-down ear lobe, or residual sagging skin. You might ask your surgeon what he means exactly by "bad".




