First of all, zygomatic bone surgery usually refers to zygomatic bone and zygomatic arch hypertrophy, and the way of surgery needs to be designed according to the candidate’s personal situation. Personally speaking, I usually use the semi-fracture way, the zygomatic protuberance is thinned by grinding and the posterior is pushed by truncation, and it is usually not fixed, and there is no need to take titanium plate in the later stage, unless it is the case of the bone being very brittle to be fixed. Some candidates are very worried about the fixation issue, questioning whether it will be loose if it is not fixed. If you have the material at hand, you can try to break a summer tree branch, which is very tough. The same thing happens in surgery, we call it a glaucomatous fracture, which is very stable and heals very well, without any bone discontinuity. But for zygomatic zygomatic arches that are particularly hypertrophic, this is a case where you need to do an osteotomy inward. The bone block is removed anteriorly, and the entire posterior part is truncated and fixed with titanium plates and nails. A tiny incision of five millimeters needs to be made externally for immobilization, and if immobilization is required the incision is enlarged to one centimeter, and a vestibular sulcus incision is made inside the mouth. In candidates with significant skeletal deformities, a coronal incision is considered to expose the zygomatic bone, and the bone is extensively osteotomized as well as shaped.