Archive for the ‘Neck Lift’ Category

Help. I’m wearing my mother’s neck

January 21st, 2008 by Dr. Jeffery Raval, MD FACS
Posted in Neck Lift, SkinTyte

I recently had opportunity to be videotaped in a class and unlike other times I’ve been filmed, the class I enrolled in meant playback after playback of this particular tape. The thing that struck me was my neck and how much it’s thickened and wrinkled in the last few years. I’ve also noticed that I have a section of skin on my neck that’s paler than the lower neck, almost as if all that time I spent in the sun and in sunbeds years ago has caught up with me…it appears I must have had my neck tucked down while tanning! Rather than wear turtleneck shirts for the rest of my life to hide my aging neck, I’d like to know what I can do. I find myself craning my neck or elongating to hide the wrinkling, and that’s really doing nothing but making me look like a hamster. Help!

Dr. Jeffrey R. Raval, triple-board certified plastic surgeon who specializes in head and neck surgery, recommends that people who aren’t yet ready for a full-blown neck lift, which involves general anesthesia and several weeks of downtime, consider first the Sciton laser pulsed light photofacial treatment in companion with the Sciton SkinTyte treatment, a series of three to five laser treatments, depending on the severity of the laxity of one’s neck skin. SkinTyte is non-invasive and takes less than an hour per treatment using only a topical anesthesia to eliminate any discomfort while the SkinTyte laser is passed over the neck area in several repetitions.

An additional treatment of BOTOX injections can be recommended to smooth out the rings or lines that sometimes develop around the neck.

Dr. Raval does perform necklift surgery under general anesthesia, usually as part of a facelift but sometimes this procedure can be performed alone. The repair of the platysma muscles helps redefine the neck. The surgery of the neck is reached through incisions around the ears and through tiny incisions under the chin. When there is a good deal of extra skin, it needs to be removed as part of the lift. This placement of the incisions permits hiding the scars behind the ears. There is some degree of swelling and possibly bruising in most patients but usually very little in the way of pain or discomfort. Swelling is mostly resolved in two to three weeks, but some swelling will persist. Most patients are quite presentable within one to two weeks.

To make an appointment for a consultation with Dr. Jeffrey R. Raval, call 303.744.2300.

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