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- Dr. Cameron Chesnut
- Dr. Richard S. Herdener
- Dr. Merrick Brodsky
- Dr. John Nia
- Dr. Adam Chahine
- Dr. Ryan C. Kelm
- Dr. Christopher Meadows
- Collin Perri, PA-C
- Aubree Chesnut, PA-C
- Kirsten Svennungsen, NP-C
- Leah Streich, MCHS, PA-C
- Cassie Prewitt, ARNP
- Lizzie Ransford
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- ÔPTIMized Facial Fat Transfer
The eyes have it series, post 32: improving symmetry. This may not appear to be a mind blowing result, but symmetry is an incredibly intricate and complicated process that involves a complex balance, where improving a single aspect of one side can create a moving target on the other. Nobody is perfectly symmetrical at baseline, and some degree of asymmetry is completely tolerable, but as we age some of those discrepancies can become more noticeable. Take a look at her right eyebrow, the volume of her upper lids, the drooping of her left lid margin more than her right, even the volume of her temples and lower lids. All of those subtle changes work together to add up to a noticeable asymmetry - here you can see the process of correcting each of those subtle aspects to create a beautiful and natural result that sits right at a normal amount of symmetry.