The Deviation in Deviated Septums

Maybe you know someone who has had surgery for a deviated septum. Their nose, they tell you, was crooked on the inside.

The thing is everyone has some level of deviation of their septum. Whether that deviation is big enough to warrant surgery versus not, is largely dependant on the functionality of their nose.  If the patient has a difficult time breathing through their nose from a deviated septum then their septum may need to be straightened.

“No one has a perfectly shaped nose,” explains Dr. Raval. “When the shape of the nose creates a functional breathing problem is when the nose may require surgery.”

Many times evidence of a deviated septum on the inside of the nose is reiterated by the poor shape of the outside of the nose—with the patient having suffered an injury or just by the genetics he or she inherited.

Dr. Jeffrey Raval is board certified in ENT (ear, nose and throat) and in facial plastic surgery and reconstructive head/neck surgery. The training he has in both the outward appearance of the nose and the inner functions give him an advantage surgically in understanding the necessary function as well as the beauty of how the nose works and looks.

Leave a Reply