CHAPTER XV
RHINOPLASTY
(Surgery of the Nose)
Rhinoplastic operations serve to correct deformities of or restore the nose. Such operations may involve only a part of or the entire organ, hence may be termed partial or total. Furthermore, a fine distinction may be drawn between general rhinoplasty as applied to such deformities when caused by traumatism, the excision of neoplasms or destructive disease, whether such correction be partial or total, and cosmetic rhinoplasty when such corrections are made purely with the object of improving the nasal form when the deformity is either hereditary or the result of remote accident.
For some unaccountable reason the latter art has not met with the general favor the profession should grant it, yet the results obtained by such specialists as have undertaken this artistic branch of surgery have been all that could be desired, and have consequently added much to the comfort and happiness of the patient.
Without a comparatively thorough knowledge of the extent of cosmetic rhinoplasty it would be difficult to draw any conclusion as to the value of this art. If it has not met with the favor it deserves it is solely due to the fact that the art has been limited to the few, and the literature on the subject is so meager, indeed, that the surgeon has been compelled in many cases to trust to his own originality in undertaking an operation of this nature.
The limitation to rhinoplasty is due primarily to the artistic skill required to obtain results; secondly, to the risks involved by loss of tissue due to gangrene, imperfect healing or accidental interference, post-operatio; and thirdly, to scarring about the face as a result of the primary and secondary wounds; in fact, so much so that many surgeons prefer to allow a small defect to remain, to escape the risks involved in correcting them.
The author believes such fear misplaced, because with the methods of surgery of the present day and the proper knowledge of the art there need be little risk involved and the result expected should be as near perfect as human skill can make it.
True, a surgeon cannot be expected to build an entire nose from the skin or other tissue of the forehead or cheeks and make it a thing of aforethought beauty and shape, but if the result be no more than a curtain of skin to hide the hideous deformity he has done his share, and such result is the worst he might look forward to.
For the correction of nasal deformities the author will consider first such operations as involve the entire loss of the nasal organ or total rhinoplasty; thereafter partial loss of the nose, and lastly such cases involving no loss of tissue and dependent on malformation only under cosmetic rhinoplasty.