Some operators have included noses of undue lobular prominence (à la Cyrano de Bergerac) under this type of deformity, and while it is to be admitted such a nose might be built up by subcutaneous prothesis the result is anything but harmonious or normal. Such a nose should be reduced by cutting operations instead of being added to. The seeming depression above the lobule is only comparative to the overdeveloped form of the lobule. The face values of every patient should be studied, and the surgeon should never attempt to break up the harmony of facial form by simplifying an operation and rendering the patient’s appearance even more ridiculous than before his attempt to correct a fault.
The correction of the deficiencies of the lower half of the nose is associated with difficulties in various directions. Either the skin over the defect is too dense to render injection an easy matter, or the nose is so broadened horizontally from the original injury that the injection, no matter how artistically done, leaves the nose bulky and ugly in appearance.
When the nasal processes of the superior maxillary bones have not been widened unduly by an injury and the skin is dense, simple subcutaneous dissection before injection will overcome the difficulty easily enough.
In that case the needle is inserted laterally in a line with the maximum depth of the depression and the point shoved up to the median line anteriorly.
Enough of the cold mixture of paraffin and vaselin, as heretofore advised, is injected to reduce the deformity nearly to the normal.
The mass is molded to give the nose as near a normal contour as possible, always keeping in mind the later broadening of the nose when the new connective tissue has taken the place of the injected mass. A later injection made, as advised heretofore, will restore the anterior line to better form.
If the nasal processes of the superior maxillary bones have been thrown outward considerably a surgical operation is necessary to reduce them.
No injection should be made until the wounds from such operation are thoroughly healed and contracted.
In all cases of this type the skin will be found to be rather dense and likely to be tied down by past inflammations to the anterior aspects of the lower lateral cartilages at their juncture with the upper lateral cartilages. If the adhesions are not too dense the harder form of the cold mixture should be used. This will not only permit of raising the skin more readily than with a softer kind of mixture, but will be more likely to retain its form under the contractile pressure brought to bear down upon it.
When the skin is closely adherent it should be loosened subcutaneously, as already advised. The injection may be done at the same sitting, and be of greater quantity than in the cases where this had not been done, for the reasons mentioned.