| Literature DB >> 33173684 |
Francesco Idone1, Elisa Bolletta2, Andrea Piedimonte3, Ferdinando Paternostro4.
Abstract
Hyaluronic acid fillers indisputably represent an important tool for face rejuvenation and volume restoration. The temporal area has recently been considered as a potential site of injection. As it happens in the middle face and in other regions of the face, the temporal fossa changes according to the aging process. In a young person, the temple profile has a fullness aspect, and this contributes to giving the face a beautiful and healthy appearance. With age, the loss of volume leads the bone prominences to be visible. The aim of this article is to classify the temporal fossa atrophy and get better into the anatomy, identifying the ideal plane to inject in, through the use of a safe and reliable technique. Cadaver dissections have been performed to specifically describe the anatomy of the temple layer by layer. The authors' preferred technique, called interfascial by cannula implantation, is discussed. All the treated patients reported a good improvement by survey according to the Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale scale. No major complications were detected. No ecchymosis neither swelling were documented. Although further studies are necessary to broaden the casuistry and better verify the potentiality of this technique, the authors do believe that it could be considered a very reliable procedure with pretty consistent results, if supported by an adequate and imperative anatomical knowledge.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33173684 PMCID: PMC7647649 DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open ISSN: 2169-7574
Fig. 1.Classification of the temporal fossa atrophy based on volume loss, measuring the distance between the most depressed point of the temporal fossa (blue dot) and the tangent line passing through the eyebrow tail (blue line). Grade 1: no distance between the blue line and the blue dot is detected. Grade 2: concave aspect of the temple with a 0–3 distance between the blue line and the blue dot. Grade 3: concavity with a distance between the blue line and the blue dot wider than 3 mm.
Video 1.Interfascial by Cannula Implantation. Video 1 from “New Perspectives In Temporal Fossa Atrophy: Anatomy, Classification, and Treatment in Aesthetic Medicine.”
Fig. 2.Anatomical view of the pretty avascular plane, which is the authors’ preferred injection site.
Fig. 3.The presence of the lateral pterygoid muscle on the anterior aspect of the temporal fossa. Our study is the first one in the literature to consider it as a part of the temporal area layers.