It's been about two years since I had surgery with my daughter.
Her daughter Case was
16 years old at the time of surgery.
She had mongolian folds and the corners of her eyes were round rather than pointed.
Her eyelids were of average thickness and she had large eyes, so I didn't think about surgery...
But she had a tendency to open her eyes with her forehead,
and as a result, the distance between her eyebrows and eyes became increasingly distant, and her eyelids began to stretch.
She started going to counseling to find out if it was ptosis and if she needed surgery.
She went to 4 consultations, and except for this one, all of them recommended eye correction.
Here, they fixed the eyebrows with their hands and watched the child open and close the eyes, and they said that
there was no problem with the child's eye-opening muscles, and
that he should only do double-handling, but that he should leave the eyebrows in place during the recovery period after the surgery and get into the habit of opening them using only the strength of the eyes.
She said that if she keeps opening her eyes with her forehead muscles while recovering, the swelling in her double eyelid line may not go down.
The double eyelid line has to be folded and straightened repeatedly to settle, but when you open your eyes with your forehead, the line is not folded and
heals poorly.
If the habit is not corrected after surgery,
there is also a method of injecting Botox into the forehead.
This is also a treatment that is actually used . It is said that
if you get forehead botox, you will not be able to move your forehead muscles, so you will have no choice but to train to open your eyes using only the strength of your eyelids.
Anyway, the conclusion was that surgery was needed in all four areas.
It is said that if you keep opening your eyes by putting pressure on your forehead and raising your eyebrows,
you will develop wrinkles on your forehead early on
,
your eyelids will gradually stretch, and the distance between your eyebrows and eyes will become increasingly distant.
Since it was a child, I wanted to touch it as little as possible, so I decided to only have double eyelid surgery (incision) and epicanthoplasty without eye correction.
They say burials often come loose...
The child said he wanted a semi-outline, and
the director said it was possible.
After the surgery, it was not semi-out, but in-out.
The epicanthoplasty is a very natural, slight opening.
I expected my bangs to be as sharp as an almond, but they are still round. She is just like the image of a gentle daughter.
I think it's fortunate that she has no scars and Nuho is not visible at all.
When I decided to get epicanthoplasty, I was worried about two things...
A week after the surgery, there was much more swelling than when I had the surgery together, but when I put pressure on my eyes and opened them, the lines looked pretty. I thought all I had to do was go down the swelling.
I got Botox on my forehead after about 10 days because I was worried that the swelling wouldn't go down because I couldn't change my habit.
Botox treatment periodically once every four months.
And it will go away someday... I waited, but
6 months... 1 year has passed, but it's still there...
If you strain your eyes and open them, they're pretty.
So, I lasted for a year, but
I decided to have the surgery again because I thought it was pointless to wait any longer
since my eyes usually open naturally
. I looked into a few hospitals and ended up having a repeat surgery one year after the surgery.
I went through several consultations about whether I could have fancy lines or almond-shaped bangs, but
in the end, I decided to go with the director who pursues natural lines without touching them as much as possible.
Compared to the first surgery, the lines became thinner, so I was upset that the original lines were scarred, but we comforted each other by saying that it wouldn't be noticeable if you didn't look hard enough.
Now, I have completely corrected the habit of opening my eyes with my forehead, and my eyes have natural double eyelids.
Mom's case:
I originally had double eyelids,
but as I got older and lost fat on my eyelids
, multiple lines appeared.
I was hesitating whether to do it when I got older,
but I heard that as the eyelids stretch and wrinkles increase as I get older,
the chance of the sutured skin crying increases, so I'm doing it now. Let's do it.
This is an easy case for surgery because the eyelids are thin and the eye originally had double eyelids
.
Burial method is also possible, but incision is the only option without worrying about it coming loose.
The four hospitals I consulted with for my daughter said almost the same thing.
During the consultation, I talked to my daughter as much as I could, and I cut it to almost 3 minutes.
I was determined to do it together once the hospital where my daughter's surgery was decided was decided.
The surgery went well, and after the stitches were removed for a week, the swelling was almost gone. Recovery was completed in 2 weeks.
When I meet close people, they don't know I had surgery until they tell me.
When I say that I had a double hand, the reaction is the same, asking if it wasn't there originally or if it healed too quickly haha.
It's the same hospital, but looking at the difference in the reviews of the two people,
it seems like it's just Kebake...
I'm upset that I had to have surgery twice when my daughter is still young. Even though I did not undergo eye correction, my habit of opening my eyes with my forehead has now been corrected, so I am grateful to the doctor who performed my first surgery.
The revision surgery doctor also said that eye correction was not necessary.
However, he advised that each person's desired line and the line that can be operated on are different, so you should research them carefully.