Dr. Terry Dubrow
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They all hated their face filler.
Every single one of them.
Mm-hmm.
and they particularly hated the filler under the eyes because this is the thinnest skin in the body if you get a little too close to the surface it results in this weird phenomenon called the tyndall effect where you can see it and it's hard to dissolve and sometimes it's not dissolvable at all filler in the face needs to be done well it it is being done a lot less now but for a while it was you know we used to call it the pillow face overfill everybody's face
And that was the key, the liquid facelift.
Fortunately, that's pretty much over.
People are not doing as much filler anymore.
So the deep plane is you go much deeper.
Theoretically, as you go closer to the nerves and you pull the entire cheek up rather than to get tightening through just skin pulling, you get a more... Not a more natural result because their faces are changing.
Let's face it.
Their before and after, they're almost... They look great, but...
Almost unrecognizable, but in a good way, some of them, right?
So that's called the deep plane.
A recent study was published in our number one journal, PRS, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, that compared 2,000 deep planes with 2,000 regular facelifts where we just do the plane called the SMAS.
There was no difference.
So, you know, the key with the facelift is go to someone who does a lot of facelifts and you'll get it.
And whatever they want to do, like the Chris Jenner, and a lot of the ones you're seeing from that very good surgeon in LA, they're not doing deep planes.
None of them.
None of them are doing deep planes.
So, you know, there's so much sort of retail, it's retail medicine.