Wire rhinoplasty is to implant a hard and relatively thick absorbable wire under the skin of the nose in a piercing way, and then shape the nose by pulling and lifting the wire, ultimately increasing the height of the bridge of the nose, increasing the height of the tip of the nose, and lengthening the tip of the nose, etc. The principle of wire augmentation is basically the same as face lifting. The principle of thread augmentation and facial buried thread lifting is basically the same, but the difference is that the skin tissue of the nose is far from being as thick as the skin tissue of the face. Therefore, the threads buried in the face have sufficient space to stimulate collagen regeneration, while the threads buried in the nose have much less effect because of the narrow space in which they are located. Secondly, even if the thread sculpture in the nose stimulates the organism to produce collagen, it will not be able to play a role in supporting the shape of the nose after the threads buried in the nose are dissolved. After the thread sculpture rhinoplasty, the skin at the tip of the nose may have depressed scarring, and there is also a possibility that the buried threads may leak out, causing the problem of infection in the nose, and in severe cases, necrosis of the skin of the nose may occur, coupled with the insufficient maintenance time and the need for multiple surgeries, therefore, most of the doctors do not recommend the use of thread sculpture for rhinoplasty. Nasal tissue is internally complex and fragile, and the jagged threads embedded in thread sculpting can cause damage to nasal tissue with each implantation, and this damage is irreversible. Repeated damage can lead to a serious situation where scarring occurs inside the nasal tissue, eventually leading to a “contracted nose”.