Is it more important I get orbital surgery or rhino surgery?

ALuciferVegetable

ALuciferVegetable

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Hello, I’ve been really considering surgery for rhino or orbital surgery for right eye but possibly both. My right eye is higher than my left and is curved so I have to lift my eyelid right eye up so it doesn’t go down. Is it more important I fix the crooked nose or fix the one major orbital issue? Anyone get surgery and if so how did it go? I had rhino surgery when I was 4 when I broke my nose just wondering how people recovered from orbital.
 

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Go for trimax buddy
 
Bimax + rhino
 
Cuz ive seen sum really bad nasolabial out there
 

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Orbital may botch u, bimax wont
 
I know orbital can fuck you over but I hate the unbalanced and the biggest thing for my to ascend is better eyes and better nose
 
Eye asymmetry will get fixed after bimax in your case.do you have cbct if you dont just take it and you will notice that you have skeletal asymmetry which contributes to eye asymmtry due to postural compensation
 
Eye asymmetry will get fixed after bimax in your case.do you have cbct if you dont just take it and you will notice that you have skeletal asymmetry which contributes to eye asymmtry due to postural compensation
What are you talking about? Bimax rearranges the jaws. It will not change the position of the orbital positions in any way.

The orbits' final positions are established during fetal development.

How can you be so consistently wrong on every topic?
 
Read it again.

"Patients who have a lower facial asymmetry......mask their asymmetry by tilting the head for camouflage"; "this compensatory head posture can give the impression of orbital dystopia"

Impression, that's the key word here. I.e. They don't actually have orbital misalignement.

This is only indicated for someone with lower facial symmetry.

If your eye sockets are actually misaligned then jaw surgery will not help.

OP does not appear to have lower facial asymmetry; his eye sockets are actually misaligned but it's really marginal.

Getting OBO in his situation would be insane. Not that any surgeon would agree to do it imo.

You should read your own sources more carefully before jumping to conclusions.



.
 
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Read it again.

"Patients who have a lower facial asymmetry......mask their asymmetry by tilting the head for camouflage"; "this compensatory head posture can give the impression of orbital dystopia"

Impression, that's the key word here. I.e. They don't actually have orbital misalignement.

This is only indicated for someone with lower facial symmetry.

If your eye sockets are actually misaligned then jaw surgery will not help.

OP does not appear to have lower facial asymmetry; his eye sockets are actually misaligned but it's really marginal.

Getting OBO in his situation would be insane. Not that any surgeon would agree to do it imo.

You should read your own sources more carefully before jumping to conclusions.



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In my opinion op might have lower facial asymmetry that causes his septum to be deviated thats why i said this….
 
In my opinion op might have lower facial asymmetry that causes his septum to be deviated thats why i said this….
You're making stuff up now. Your own source specially refers to lower facial symmetry - i.e asymmetric jaw development. That’s why bimax is performed in the paper. Come on. Read it.

Imagine telling someone with a deviated septum that they need jaw surgery…..
 
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You're making stuff up now. Your own source specially refers to lower facial symmetry - i.e asymmetric jaw development. That’s why bimax is performed in the paper. Come on. Read it.

Imagine telling someone with a deviated septum that they need jaw surgery…..
Seems like you are soo retarded.uneven bite force is the main reason people develop asymmetry when there is asymmetry it doesnt only happen in the mandible but also the maxilla which effects the nose
 
Seems like you are soo retarded.uneven bite force is the main reason people develop asymmetry when there is asymmetry it doesnt only happen in the mandible but also the maxilla which effects the nose
This will be my last response on this topic:

- OP clearly has asymmetric orbits - your paper was about patients trying to mask lower facial asymmetry, thereby giving the illusion of misaligned orbits So however you define lower facial symmetry, your paper is irrelevant here. It doesn't fix OP's problem like you claim.

- Lower facial asymmetry in your paper specifically refers to the the upper and lower jaws developing asymmetrically. That's why bimax is performed in the case studies. I never said just the mandible. Read my comments and your own source.

- OP does not appear to have asymmetric jaws, only a deviated septum, which is corrected with a septoplasty - not jaw surgery. Even if OP did have asymmetric jaws, he would likely need a septoplasty after or alongside jaw surgery to correct it.

- Jaw surgery is not indicated for OP. Up to 4 in 10 jaw surgery patients actually get deviated septums from the operation. It could easily make the problem worse - not better.
 
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also eyes > nose (for instance that one french model with crazy eye area but big nose)
 

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