Do you have misconceptions about “facelift surgery”?

We have found that many beauty seekers have misconceptions about “facelift surgery”, so today we will talk about this technique. What is a “facelift”? “Facelift surgery” is a common name, also known as facelift wrinkle removal surgery, refers to the facial rejuvenation surgery to tighten the facial skin and reduce wrinkles due to the sagging facial skin, which is ineffective through drugs and physical methods. Misconception 1: Facelift surgery refers to a major facelift. In fact, facelift surgery does not only refer to one technique, such as traditional large facelift wrinkle removal, small incision wrinkle removal, endoscopic wrinkle removal and minimally invasive facial lifting, etc., all belong to facelift surgery. Most of the facelift surgery that people talk about refers to the traditional large facelift wrinkle removal. A circular incision about 10 cm along the ear or along the hairline? The procedure is also a type of surgery that was done more than 10 years ago. Due to the relatively large trauma, minimally invasive technology is constantly updated and iterated, and with little difference in results, people naturally tend to prefer surgical procedures with less damage, faster recovery and less risk. Myth 2: All facelifts require skin removal. Whether or not you need to remove excess skin depends on your degree of facial laxity. For those who have good facial skin elasticity, they do not need to remove the skin when they have a facelift, and the localized piles of skin are basically flat when the stitches are removed. The reason for this is that the skin has good resilience and self-stress, just like the belly after the birth of a baby, and will soon retract on its own. If the sagging skin is severe, excess tissue will need to be removed. Myth 3: A facelift can cause deformation of the ears. There are 2 possible reasons for this: 1. If the sagging skin is very severe, more skin will need to be removed to achieve a tighter skin, which may result in “misshapen ears”. 2. In cases where the skin is not treated deeply, only the epidermis is lifted and the suture tension is too high, resulting in “elf ears”.