I am a person who suffered a major double-squad failure in Daegu and has been traveling to Sinsa and Gangnam, Seoul since 4 months after the surgery for reoperation.
When I had my first surgery, I had double eyelids from birth. As I turned 40, they became loose, so I went to make them more distinct. But the doctor said he would do it naturally, so I trusted the director and laid down on the operating table as designed, and he created a toad.
At that time, I visited many temples and received information and comfort. It's been 6 months of hell. Now that I am able to have reoperation,
I will write a review of the reoperation.
My maternal eyes were pretty good, but I didn't get the first surgery, so I looked into a lot of things about reoperation.
1. Must be a one-person director (because of a sense of responsibility and mission)
2. Must be good at picking the two lines, must be a professional (originally the space between the two lumps is wide, but after the first surgery, it narrowed, so I learned how important the two lumps are) 3. Be able to lower my
line by a lot.
4. No eye correction during the second attempt (my eyes, which had excellent ability to open my eyes, were corrected in the first attempt, so it was uncomfortable every time I opened them).
This part was crucial. In most cases, double-line picking is done together with eye correction.
The final choice was IQ and satisfied all the listed conditions, and I was amazed at the fact that there was almost no swelling immediately after the surgery. A sausage girl who recognizes the jackpot
two-string pick? Definitely go to that hospital.
Do you want incision surgery but are afraid of swelling? Definitely go with IQ.
The director was very meticulous and serious throughout the surgery.
The first doctor must have thought I was unconscious, so I chatted a lot with the nurse and told him to open my eyes only once. The IQ doctor seemed to have told me to open my eyes about 10 times. I
looked around Shinsa and Gangnam for my reoperation, and there was not a single place that stopped me from reoperation after 6 months, but here, neither the director nor the doctor stopped me. It was so. Just wait for 6 more months.
That's how much I felt that the awareness about surgery was about safety and responsibility. I asked them to do it unconditionally, saying I wouldn't survive, and the surgery went well, so we ended up happily together.
There is no need for me to promote it as the hospital is already always overflowing with patients, but if you really think you can't live like me, go to IQ!