Author Archive

Hi everyone!!

Friday, September 17th, 2010
Dr. Young has asked me to help him out with this blog so eventually, I’ll start about blogging more on a regular basis.  Before I do, let me introduce myself.  My name is Michelle Lew, and I recently just joined Dr. Young’s team.  I’m very excited about this opportunity, and I look forward to all of my endeavors here.  I’m his IV nurse on surgery days, but I’ll also help out with pre-ops and post-ops appointment.  I’ll also be doing Botox and facial fillers.  I’m the short Asian girl in the office, so when you see me, please say “hi.”  I love meeting new people and I enjoy working with everyone.

A little more on my background.  Before joining Dr. Young’s team, I was the recovery nurse at a highly known body contour center which performed over 100 procedures a month.  I loved it there, but I wanted to do more than just liposuction, hence my new position here.  Dr. Young does AMAZING work, and I love all of the services that he offers his patients.  My past experiences also including working in the Operating Room at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma and on a med-surg floor at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle.  Feel free to leave a comment with any questions you might have.  =)

Again, I’m very excited about this new journey, and I can’t wait to share it with you guys!

– M

Botox is good for dynamic smile lines, filler and resurfacing can help static lines

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Restylane and Juvederm (or Perlane)  are both great options for filling and improving static lines and dynamic to a degree.  Ipl will, in my opinion, have little effect on the wrinkles. Glycolic peels can help to a minimal degree on fine lines and improving your general skin appearance. Resurfacing is another way to improve your wrinkles on your face by approaching from the outer skin side.  Whereas fillers approach the wrinkles from inside.

Botox is good for dynamic smile and facial  lines, in contrast filler and resurfacing can help static lines. Botox is a neuromuscular agent that blocks the action of muscles by acting on the nerves that innervate muscles.  The way you can tell if botox will work for you is to identify whether your smile lines or wrinkles are accentuated or increased by the act of smiling or the muscles that move your face when you smile.  Botox is good for the wrinkles that increase in appearance with muscle movement.  If it is the wrinkles that are present when you are not moving a part of the face, botox will have less of an effect.  But botox will have an effect on those wrinkles getting deeper when you move your face.  But when your face is at rest the wrinkles that are there will not noticeably improve with botox.  One thing to realize is that if you use botox for a long time, your static wrinkles can improve but this takes a while.  Your cells in your skin have to remodel your skin where the static wrinkles are in order to improve those wrinkles which could take months and years.  Part of what makes wrinkles deeper are the the loss of volume within your face.  This places the skin closer to your muscles and thus when you move your muscles to smile or talk, there actions begin to have more effect on your skin and the effects are wrinkles with the movement.  The volume loss can help this situation by increasing the distance of your skin to your facial muscles.  Fillers are a temporary solution (anywhere from 6 months to a year) and Fat injections are more of a long term solution.  The YoungVolumizer is a great way to volumize your face in a natural way with no incisions, and no general anesthesia.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Prolonged redness can occur with Laser Resurfacing and Active Fx / Deep Fx / Total Fx / Max Fx

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Prolonged redness can occur with laser resurfacing.  Although with Active Fx and Deep Fx this should be much less common.  If there is some tenderness, itching, and the redness is persisting and it begins to become more raised, you could be developing some scarring and should be seen soon.  High dose steroids would be helpful in this case but be wary that this could impede collagen formation at a later date that is helpful in improving your skin.  Contact dermatitis can occur if you are starting some creams that could be irritating your skin at this crucial stage. I would then consider holding off on those topicals and stay with some gentler products.  The other possibility is that the doctor was more aggressive around your eyes which could lead to prolonged redness which is common after traditional resurfacing.  I would see your doctor to have him figure out this. He will know his settings to determine what is going on with the setting of your physical exam.

Click here to watch our video on laser resurfacing:

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Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Rasping your nasal bones is possible but more difficult under local anesthesia

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Rhinoplasty / nose shaping techniques can be done to improve your current condition. For your situation, you would only need some small incisions inside your nose.  Then a rasp and other instruments can be used to take down the sharp bony area.  If this is a new situation, it is possible that this will go down with time.  Sometimes, swelling next to the bone can feel like bone and this may all that it could be. Only time could tell sometimes in this situation but I would ask your physician for more details.  Rasping the bone should range from 2000-10000 or more depending on the extent of the injury and that should cover all of the costs.  It will vary with the surgeon and the area of the country.

These are what rasps look like.

The arrow shows where you can approach your rhinoplasty to rasp the nasal bones. Some surgeons can do the whole rhinoplasty without an external incision. This limits your ability to shape the nasal tip through a closed approach.

The external open approach to rhinoplasty entails an incision where the green arrow is pointing below:

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Fat transfer from an animal, can that be done and also can it be done by a nurse at her house?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

This is a response to a question that I answered for a person who had a procedure by someone else:

Fat transfer from an animal is not something that sounds legal and is not a sound principle. Given that it was done at a nurse’s house sounds extremely fishy to me. That in itself is not legal unless she has established her home as a place to business and is certified to do these procedures.  To begin with RN’s aren’t supposed to inject fat in the first place. Fat from an animal will also be completely degraded by a person’s body and any results are likely due to scarring.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

What can you do about small nostrils due to thick skin?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Composite grafts through rhinoplasty principles can help. What this is means is that you can take a graft from your ear or other area which will include a composite of skin, cartilage and intervening tissue that can be implanted within the nostril to enlarge the aperture.  Also different tissue advancing techniques and transposition of  close tissue from the mouth or around the nose can be done to also enlarge the nostril.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Microdermabrasion for lower eyelid bags? Will it help?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

There are many ways to do microdermabrasion. The really superficial ones won’t really make a difference. There are some physician / medical grade machines that can go deeper with stronger suction that can be varied. But you would really need a doctor to do it or some one under the close supervision of a doctor doing it. Essentially, when you get into the deeper, stronger ones you are doing some resurfacing like chemical peels and lasers. This could help increase a layer of collagen that could help with the bags to a small amount. Other better options include fillers, fat injections, midface lift, lower blepharoplasty, and lower eyelid rim facial implants.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Philip Young MD talks about the recovery process for Rhinoplasty (Bellevue, WA)

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Recovering from rhinoplasty can be from something very minimal to something more significant.  It really all depends on what you do with the rhinoplasty.  Sometimes, the rhinoplasty entails just tailoring the sides of the nose which one can recover from very quickly.  Certain tip refinements can have quick recovery times as well.  One thing to know is that refining the tip as a whole may entail a quick recovery, but the refining process can take several weeks to months to take significant changing to take place.  When you work on the bridge and take down a significant hump, this usually requires controlled shaping of the nasal bones which will lead to more bruising and swelling. This will extend the recovery to time to a week or more.   So based on these variables, your recovery could take from as little as 3-4 days to a week or more.  Most of the time your surgeon will put on a nasal splint to protect your nasal bones especially if you have the shaping of the nasal bones and this is usually left in for at least 6-7 days.  Nasal obstruction is something that can be bothersome for the patient and this is variable as well.  It also depends on how much is done with the septum or midline cartilage structure.  I tend not to place splints inside the nose and hence breathing is usually alot better for my patients.   If nothing is done to the septum your breathing can be pretty much unaffected.  Pain is variable and also depends on how much is done.  If you get the works for your rhinoplasty, you could had significant discomfort for a few days to a week or more.  Bleeding is usually more significant the first 24-48 hours.  It should be no more than a trickle.  More significant bleeding should be discussed with your doctor.  Swelling also depends on how much is done.  The swelling in the tip could take months to resolve.  It goes away quicker in the bridge area.  Sutures usually are removed 5-7 days later and depends on your surgeon.  If you have any questions you can always reach me through our website. Here is a video on rhinoplasty showing a live demonstration but be forewarned this may be too graphic for some.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Dr Young on Revision Rhinoplasty (Bellevue / Seattle WA)

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Revision Rhinoplasty (Dr Young specializes in revision rhinoplasty as is located in Bellevue / Seattle Washington) is a very difficult procedure.  Rhinoplasty itself is one of the most difficult surgeries that a plastic surgery will perform during his career.  Usually there are a lot of anatomical issues that are much different in a revision rhinoplasty as opposed to rhinoplasty done on a nose that has not had anything done.  The first major thing is scarring from previous procedures that obscures your view of the existing anatomy.  The scarring makes it harder to dissect through the planes and identify important structures.   Sometimes it is simple where there is a persistent hump on the bridge that needs to be lowered.  If the lowering involves removing bone, you may need to get your nasal bones restructured which could increase the recovery with more bruising.  If too much bone or cartilage was taken, you may need an implant or graft from somewhere else.  Silicone, and medpor can be used (goretex is another option) and these are some options.  Rib or ear cartilage are other options that will require harvesting from those areas of the chest wall or back of the ear.  Whether rib or ear is chosen depends on the size of the defect.  If it is larger, a rib graft might need to be used.  If the defect is smaller, ear cartilage could suffice.  Your surgeon could determine what is the best choice with your understanding and together you can decide.    Many people don’t want to harvest a rib cartilage graft given the extent of the surgery.  This is when an implant might be better.  Implants with silicone, medpor, and goretex are options as I mentioned.  The benefits of these implants are that they keep their shape,  they don’t require harvesting from another site, they don’t cause cancer, they don’t get absorbed so the augmentation you acheive is likely going to stay for a very long time.  The drawbacks are that there is a higher risk for infection, chronic pain, extrusion, etc. These are all in contrast with tissues that are harvested from your own body.  Many times, with revision rhinoplasty you also need to use grafts to replace missing tissue in the nose.  This needs to be done to either correct the irregularities of the nasal tip, the collapse of the middle part of the nose that is above the nasal tip, or improve the relationship between the nostril rim and the flaring of the nostrils. When you go into see your doctor, he should explain to you that they are planning to do to correct, options that they have for you, choices that you can have a say in, etc.  They should be an open book about how they are planning your revision and you should all of your questions answered.  If you have additional questions you can always write me here or contact me through my website at www.drphilipyoung.com.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington

Dr Young examines Rhinoplasty Cost / Price and how to evaluate this when you consider Nose shaping / Rhino plasty.

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

A frequent question that people have is how much does Rhinoplasty / Nose Plastic Surgery (Dr Young of Bellevue near Seattle, WA) costs.  There are some resources for the average cost of Rhinoplasty that range from 4000-10000 for the surgeons fee.  That doesn’t include the costs for the facility and for the anesthesia and anesthesiologist.  The fee for the facility can range from 500-2000.  The fee for the anesthesiologist can range from 200-1000.  So the range for an Rhinoplasty can be from 7000-15000.  We have a surgical facility near us and they charge 650 for the first hour for the anesthesiologist and each additional hour is 300 for each additional hour.  The facility is 1000 for the first hour and each additional hour is 500.  Things that make a difference is if the Rhinoplasty is a revision, if you need implants, the costs of the implants, if rib needs to be harvested (which could significantly add to the cost), if ear cartilage needs to taken, if the rhinoplasty is just for the tip / dorsum / or nostril area.  When you really analyze things, it ultimately comes down to the time it needs to address your particular issues.  Based on this your surgeon and his staff will come up with some pricing for you to consider.  Implants for the bridge of the nose, for sheets can range from 200-400 dollars for each implant.  A revision usually adds 1-2 hours to the procedure and could increase the price by 1-2 thousand dollars.  Ear cartilage requires about 45 minutes to an hour to harvest sometimes less and this could be 500-1000 dollars more.  These are some of the things your plastic surgeon will think about when he comes up with pricing.

It is good to find out what the average price for Rhinoplasty is for your area.  You can do this by going to multiple consultations.  Sometimes you get what you pay for, as they say.  Somewhere in the average might be a good idea, at least do consider someone that is extraordinarily above the others unless there is compelling evidence that you think that person will do the job that justifies the pricing you receive.

Thanks for reading, Dr Young

Dr Young specializes in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and is located in Bellevue near Seattle, Washington