2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.asjsur.2016.07.007
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Comparison of aesthetic facial criteria between Caucasian and East Asian female populations: An esthetic surgeon's perspective

Abstract: Objective aesthetic criteria are important for patient evaluation and analysis during aesthetic surgeries, while successful aesthetic surgeries must take into account the underlying ethnic differences. The aim of this study is to help surgeons and scientists better plan facial aesthetic surgeries and understand the aesthetic needs according to different patients by reviewing and comparing the current aesthetic principles and preferences in Caucasian and East Asian populations. PubMed and The Cochrane Library w… Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, the anteromedial cheek, which has lower degrees of movement and adhesion, better enables the assessment of filler maintenance over time (Park et al, ). Accordingly, recommendations regarding cheek filler treatment in Asian patients suggest that products should be injected into the anteromedial cheek to reduce a “flat” frontal appearance (Gao, Niddam, Noel, Hersant, & Meningaud, ), given that Asian faces tend to be broader with well‐developed zygomas than narrower Western faces (Figure ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the anteromedial cheek, which has lower degrees of movement and adhesion, better enables the assessment of filler maintenance over time (Park et al, ). Accordingly, recommendations regarding cheek filler treatment in Asian patients suggest that products should be injected into the anteromedial cheek to reduce a “flat” frontal appearance (Gao, Niddam, Noel, Hersant, & Meningaud, ), given that Asian faces tend to be broader with well‐developed zygomas than narrower Western faces (Figure ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Actually speaking, conventional cephalometric data cannot reflect different beauty standards according to race, ethnicity, gender, period, or age. 7,13,14 Ideal values suggested by the old cephalometric norm have not changed in many years, and for the present, using these norms alone will produce inconsistencies between the doctors' perspectives and the patients' desires. In my view, cephalometric analysis is rather a uniform measurement method, and the analysis inevitably mutes or excludes individual facial characteristics or beauty preferences.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This results in larger asymmetric facial measurements for the subjects belonging to African ethnicity. In contrast, Europeans have thinner lips owing to a genetic trait [32]. The collinearity analysis shown in Figure 12a,b suggest that the most significant differences occur for the asymmetric dimensions D17, D18, and D19 ranging from 3.5 mm to 4.25 mm both for MORPH and FERET datasets, owing to wider nose bridge of the Africans compared to the Europeans.…”
Section: African Vs Europeanmentioning
confidence: 96%