Is there any hope to ascend this abysmal eye area? My eyes are so negative I dont even think a canthoplasty by itself would fix it.

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Vxnn

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I wouldn't be surprised if the actual orbital bone is negative, I have no idea where to even begin on how to fix this eye area, it definitely requires multiple different types of procedures, and for what? To end up botched and uncanny? Is this truly unfixable? I dont even know where to begin.






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Want to trade eye areas? please?
 
it definitely requires multiple different types of procedures
lower eyelid retraction
canthoplasty
fat grafting
... and, by the look of it, an infraorbital implant. If confirmed, that would be the first procedure of your surgical journey.

That's a lot, but your eye area is really bad indeed.

On the bright side, you have a very nice eye color enhanced by a neat limbal ring. And decent eyelashes & eyebrows to top it off.
If surgeries do their job, then your eye area might ironically become your biggest asset.
 
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lower eyelid retraction
canthoplasty
fat grafting
... and, by the look of it, an infraorbital implant. If confirmed, that would be the first procedure of your surgical journey.

That's a lot, but your eye area is really bad indeed.

On the bright side, you have a very nice eye color enhanced by a neat limbal ring. And decent eyelashes & eyebrows to top it off.
If surgeries do their job, then your eye area might ironically become your biggest asset.
I appreciate the response, does sound like quite a few procedures indeed, how risky are these surgeries and the likelihood I get botched? I understand its dependent on the surgeon but are these difficult procedures? And when you say first procedure of my surgical journey, does that mean that's just to start for improving my eye area? Even with all these procedures it still wouldn't be enough?
 
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nice eyes color btw

you need canthoplasty and infra fat grafts/implant
 
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how risky are these surgeries and the likelihood I get botched?
I don't have any botching rate in mind. Not even sure such data exists, as it must vary a lot indeed depending on the doctor and the exact technique used. You would have to discuss that directly with the surgeons you'll be consulting.

My limited knowledge doesn't allow me to state categorically how risky a procedure really is.
If I had to guess, the implant is the trickiest of the list, followed by canthoplasty, lower eyelid retraction, and fat grafting (in that specific order).

And when you say first procedure of my surgical journey, does that mean that's just to start for improving my eye area?
Yes, you would start off with the implant, to lay a good foundation for what then comes on top. Your current condition suggests a significant structural deficit, i.e. your orbital bone doesn't offer proper support to the eye and soft tissues surrounding it.
If you don't fix that underlying structural issue, I assume the results of the other procedures (cantho, LER, fat grafting) will be suboptimal.

Even with all these procedures it still wouldn't be enough?
Assuming you get good results from all the aforementioned procedures, that would be enough to generate a good-looking eye area. Nothing else would be needed. Maybe some additional fat grafting down the road, to touch things up. But the overall benefit will be long-lasting. The worst that can happen is the need to revise the implant. I can't tell you how likely that is to happen. Other users may chime in.
 

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