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Aesthetic restoration of the nose.
Clinics in Plastic Surgery 1985 July
By using intranasal tissues for lining, employing cartilage battens to brace against contraction or collapse, designing axial skin flaps from exact three-dimensional patterns, using the topographic subunits of the nose as templates, and refining the result by subcutaneous sculpturing, a new nasal part that is nearly normal in appearance can be created in a few stages. It should be remembered that the restored part is not a nose, but merely a collage of forehead skin, cheek skin, mucosa, vestibular lining, nasal septum, and ear cartilage fragments all stuck together with collagen, as with glue. It is taken for a nose only because its contour, color, and texture are exact. The principles of aesthetic reconstruction are valid, and the results are consistent.
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