Susan's Place Logo

News:

Visit our Discord server  and Wiki

Main Menu

Lip Lift scars - how visible are they? Anyone has photos? Alternatives?

Started by anjaq, October 31, 2017, 05:32:54 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

anjaq

Hi.

So almost everyone I show my current before FFS photos recommends me a lip lift. I tried to simulate it with a toothpick but have mixed feelings about it - my feeling is that it makes my mouth look a bit more like the corners drop down. But maybe thats just because I cannot simulate it for real with just pushing up the lip with toothpicks or a pen.

I had one face to face consultation where we discussed it shortly, but the surgon advised against it - not because there would not be a benefit, but because he said there will be a visible scar that, knowing me a bit, would bother me. He also said that in my case the scar cannot be hidden in a crease as there is none :(

So I am a bit unsure now. The safe option is now to not do it and I have removed it from my list of procedures because of that issue, but people keep telling me that it has a huge effect for feminization and that it totally would make sense for me. So I am torn - I definitely am not good at dealing with clearl visible facial scars that everyone knows I had some plastic surgery done, so I wonder just how bad it is. I am also not wearing Makeup except on a few rare days, so covering the scar forever with Makeup is not an option.

So basically I have some questions:
* anyone experienced a negative impact of the lip lift on the shape of the mouth (downturn of the corners=?
* anyone can tell me what the visibility of the scar in the long run depends on and maybe where can I find photos?
* What could be done to eliminate that scar if it is visible?
* Any alternative to classic lip lift? I read about endonasal lip lift, but was told it does not look natural because lip skin is inside the nose then. I also read about plasma pen treatments, but those seem to be rather new and I am not sure they actually work....


  •  

Mandy M

Great questions Anjaq. All I know is that you shouldn't have it done the same time as a nose job. The nose needs to be settled before a lip lift is performed.

I'd have thought that if the cut is made really close to the nostril it wouldn't be that visible?

x
  •  

Faith

I can't say much but personally, I like your current lips. They are better than mine. Why take a risk?
That's all I have for opinion.

BTW, Vitamin E oil is great for skin health and diminish the look of scars, especially when the scar is new. Apply as often as possible. We keep several consistencies for different purposes.
I left the door open, only a few came through. such is my life.
Bluesky:@faithnd.bsky.social

  •  

anjaq

@Mandy - why should it not be done at the same time? I thought it is common to do it at the same time as then the same incision can be used?

@Nameless - well I dont hate my lips now - its more the appearance of the area between my mouth and the nose that I dislike - it is a bit flat and long.


I am aware that my facial features are not horrible and many trans women would gladly change - or are hoping to have these features after a FFS, so I am used to being told that others need FFS much more than I supposedly do.

Vitamin E oil - I do have it but I dont know what to do - last time I had a surgery this year, the surgeon told me to first apply nothing until the stitches come out and then afterwards only apply silicone, but this as often as possible. So I dont know what to do with the Vitamin E oil then - it probably does not mix with silicone. So do it intermittently? Apply Vit E oil for an hour until it has entered the skin, then wash and apply the silikone for the rest of the day? What is the effect of the Vitamin exactly? There seem to be several issues with scars that I experienced. They can he a bit hardened, maybe even protuding a bit, they also can be depressed, leaving a groove, they can turn first red and later bright white and stay white (unless they are irritaded, then they turn red) and they usually tend to stretch and widen a bit. I think most scar treatment with silicone and maybe also Vitamins are directed against the first issue - hardened and protuding scars, but not so much the other issues?

  •  

Sophia Sage

I found the scar needed makeup for a good six months before it wasn't visible due to redness.  Same for the hairline, though that isn't the same sort of issue.

Anjaq, you might want to start incorporating makeup into your daily routine now, so it's "normal" by the time of your surgery?
What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
  •  

Mandy M

Quote from: anjaq on October 31, 2017, 06:54:29 AM
@Mandy - why should it not be done at the same time? I thought it is common to do it at the same time as then the same incision can be used?


Because your nose takes time to settle from surgery and if you don't allow this to happen the results of the lip lift can be truly hideous. It's best to allow 6 months between a nose job and a lip lift. I'm just telling what surgeons have said to me and it makes complete sense.

M x
  •  

Faith

Quote from: anjaq on October 31, 2017, 06:54:29 AM... Vitamin E oil - I do have it but I dont know what to do - last time I had a surgery this year, the surgeon told me to first apply nothing until the stitches come out and then afterwards only apply silicone, but this as often as possible. So I dont know what to do with the Vitamin E oil then - it probably does not mix with silicone. So do it intermittently? Apply Vit E oil for an hour until it has entered the skin, then wash and apply the silikone for the rest of the day? What is the effect of the Vitamin exactly? There seem to be several issues with scars that I experienced. They can he a bit hardened, maybe even protuding a bit, they also can be depressed, leaving a groove, they can turn first red and later bright white and stay white (unless they are irritaded, then they turn red) and they usually tend to stretch and widen a bit. I think most scar treatment with silicone and maybe also Vitamins are directed against the first issue - hardened and protuding scars, but not so much the other issues? ...

Do what your Dr says during healing. Vitamin E would be after. It will help on 'normal' skin beyond the silicone bandage area. not too close. Use vitamin E on the scar tissue only after the Dr's treatments and recommendations are done. It will help on old scars to soften and lighten them, although it'll take much longer and appear to not do anything.

I use it because my body heals too slow, it makes a huge difference. I've done testing where applied only partially, the Vitamin E treated area easily healed twice as fast. I'm not one for placebo or gimmicks, I try to confirm.
I left the door open, only a few came through. such is my life.
Bluesky:@faithnd.bsky.social

  •  

anjaq

@Sophia: Yes, I guess if I am doing this, I should learn how to cover up before the surgery. My guess would be to use a bit of a concealer pen and then use BB cream for the rest of the face, maybe that is enough? It is a Makeup for Dummies version, about my skill level ;) - but the question so far is if I am getting this or not. The scar will probably be red for 3-4 months, this was the same with my breast lift scars now. But judging from those scars, afterwards they turn white (whiter than the surrounding skin) and become somewhat widened and uneven. This would then require permanent coverup, even after 6 months or a year - maybe forever? I could do Makeup for a few months to cover up healing process, but dont want to depend on it.

@Mandy: Well that sounds horrible then. Which surgeons told this? The ones I have quotes from (Facialteam, diMaggio, Telang, van der Veen and some more) never mentioned that and quite a few of them suggested a lip lift and a rhinoplasty. If that is the case, I guess lip lift is out of the question anyways with FFS, if I plan to get rhinoplasty done there, which I lean towards at this point...

@Nameless Ok, well the doctor this year told me to use silicone gel on the scars for half a year or more. So it would still help to use it afterwards? Or to use it carefully in the areas that are not covered in silicone - which is a bit hard to do as the oil is kind of moving around easily. I bought a bottle of it , but so far did not use it a lot because of the silicone gel and because the surgery was in march, so I am now using up the remaining scar silicone gel I have and then would change to the oil?

  •  

Sophia Sage

Quote from: anjaq on October 31, 2017, 09:18:24 AM@Sophia: Yes, I guess if I am doing this, I should learn how to cover up before the surgery. My guess would be to use a bit of a concealer pen and then use BB cream for the rest of the face, maybe that is enough? It is a Makeup for Dummies version, about my skill level ;) - but the question so far is if I am getting this or not. The scar will probably be red for 3-4 months, this was the same with my breast lift scars now. But judging from those scars, afterwards they turn white (whiter than the surrounding skin) and become somewhat widened and uneven. This would then require permanent coverup, even after 6 months or a year - maybe forever? I could do Makeup for a few months to cover up healing process, but dont want to depend on it.

The long term result of the scar will depend mostly on surgeon skill and how your body heals scars.  Mine didn't turn white (unlike my forehead scar), but instead makes a crease for the bottom of my nose.  I've gone years at a time without makeup without it being noticed.

However, I don't think you're fully grasping what I mean by makeup for the short term.  Concealer and BB cream likely won't provide enough coverage.  Unless you don't bruise deeply or get much redness, you should be thinking full makeup with proper foundation. 
What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
  •  

Faith

Nothing works immediate. no matter what you do the scars are more obvious when new and will be whiter (typically) than surrounding skin. How thick or thin depends on how it was closed and you.

Work the Vitamin E in like a lotion. Stay back for any fresh healing scars, you don't want to weaken it. If the silicone is working for you, see if you can get more. Definitely stay back from the silicone. I'm no Dr, I have no idea how they'd get along mixed.

I have one wide scar on my hand, 40+ yrs old (the scar, I'm older :P ). You can see it if looking for it but the color is almost identical to the surrounding skin. It's flat and soft.

When in doubt, play it safe.
I left the door open, only a few came through. such is my life.
Bluesky:@faithnd.bsky.social

  •  

flytrap

A couple things models do:
Smiling
Slightly lifting the upper lip like something is yucky

These will both give a nature subtle lift to the top lip.
  •  

AnonyMs

I'd suggest doing some research on vitamin E. I've read reports that it can make things worse and shouldn't be used. I'd go with things like Kelo-Cote, some days after the sutures have been removed.
  •  

Rachel

You can not see my lip lift scar. Dr. Spiegel did my lip lift. When Dr. McGinn reviewed my FFS results she said the blethoplasty (lower) was excellent and she said she could not see the lip lift scar. She was a few feet away, perhaps 3, and was looking directly at me looking for a scar.
HRT  5-28-2013
FT   11-13-2015
FFS   9-16-2016 -Spiegel
GCS 11-15-2016 - McGinn
Hair Grafts 3-20-2017 - Cooley
Voice therapy start 3-2017 - Reene Blaker
Labiaplasty 5-15-2017 - McGinn
BA 7-12-2017 - McGinn
Hair grafts 9-25-2017 Dr.Cooley
Sataloff Cricothyroid subluxation and trachea shave12-11-2017
Dr. McGinn labiaplasty, hood repair, scar removal, graph repair and bottom of  vagina finished. urethra repositioned. 4-4-2018
Dr. Sataloff Glottoplasty 5-14-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal in office procedure 10-22-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal revision 2 4-3-2019 Bottom of vagina closed off, fat injected into the labia and urethra repositioned.
Dr. Thomas in 2020 FEMLAR
  • skype:Rachel?call
  •  

anjaq

Why is it that with these treatments there are alway conflicting data - Vitamin E is good or maybe harmful? This sort of KeloCote and other scar creams - some like them, the surgeon I saw told me to stay away from them as they may make it worse and told me to stick with silicone gel as the only treatment...
It seems it all much mor about opinions that science :(

So, my scars on leg and breast basically all turned white and a bit uneven and stretched so far :(

This really discourages me from getting scars in openly visible areas. I have scars on my breasts all over, but I accepted that - with a bra its invisible and when I am naked, well, I need so accept that I had something done there and people can see it, but in the face it is part of everyday life, not just Sauna, locker rooms or intimacy.

@Rachel - so maybe there are some experts who do great lip lifts scars that are invisible - I dont know. I always have the impression it is only part skill of the surgeon, but big part the way the body heals. I read positive reports about almost invisible scars from various surgeons, but also often there are some people who say it is not invisible but easily concealed... so I would to find like one of the top 10 experts in lip lifts to maybe trust this to him and not just look for FFS surgeons, I guess other surgeons may do this more often?

@Sophia - so you were not just talking about the lip lift scar regarding the Makeup, but more generally about FFS? I was thinking only about the lip lift scar for the months after - though if it is red, some coverstick would cover it well and because then one spot has Makeup on it, the rest should also be toned a bit. But it sounds like you were talking more generally about the whole FFS and thus the whole face? I have no clue about full Makeup. I actually hate it - It leaves brown stains on all clothes. I keep touching my face and then smudge it. It looks plastic or like a mask if I try it - horrible.


  •  

Sophia Sage

Quote from: anjaq on November 01, 2017, 06:00:18 AM@Sophia - so you were not just talking about the lip lift scar regarding the Makeup, but more generally about FFS? I was thinking only about the lip lift scar for the months after - though if it is red, some coverstick would cover it well and because then one spot has Makeup on it, the rest should also be toned a bit. But it sounds like you were talking more generally about the whole FFS and thus the whole face? I have no clue about full Makeup. I actually hate it - It leaves brown stains on all clothes. I keep touching my face and then smudge it. It looks plastic or like a mask if I try it - horrible.

If you're coming back to work at 3 weeks, you'll still be dealing with a few more weeks of light bruising -- hence the full coverage makeup.  As far as the lip lift scar goes, I've never found spot coverage to be very effective -- I find that the concealer/product is still visible and hence defeats the purpose, drawing attention to where I don't want it.  Full makeup doesn't have that problem.

If you're getting makeup on your clothes, you need a better quality foundation, or perhaps a better powder to fix it with.
What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
  •  

AnonyMs

Quote from: anjaq on November 01, 2017, 06:00:18 AM
Why is it that with these treatments there are alway conflicting data - Vitamin E is good or maybe harmful? This sort of KeloCote and other scar creams - some like them, the surgeon I saw told me to stay away from them as they may make it worse and told me to stick with silicone gel as the only treatment...
It seems it all much mor about opinions that science :(

The effects of topical vitamin E on the cosmetic appearance of scars.
CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that there is no benefit to the cosmetic outcome of scars by applying vitamin E after skin surgery and that the application of topical vitamin E may actually be detrimental to the cosmetic appearance of a scar. In 90% of the cases in this study, topical vitamin E either had no effect on, or actually worsened, the cosmetic appearance of scars. Of the patients studied, 33% developed a contact dermatitis to the vitamin E. Therefore we conclude that use of topical vitamin E on surgical wounds should be discouraged.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10417589

The Efficacy of Silicone Gel for the Treatment of Hypertrophic Scars and Keloids
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2918339/#!po=47.6744

The Effects of Topical Agent (Kelo-Cote or Contractubex) Massage on the Thickness of Post-Burn Scar Tissue Formed in Rats
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3840175/
  •  

anjaq

Sigh. That sounds really annoying. I should have done the FFS in a time when I have no work or take a sabbattical or something. I hate full Makeup, I never was good at it when I tried. I takes many bad attempts and weeks or watching videos and practicing it in the bathroom , its bad for my skin and I am not sure I would feel comfortable with it.
So maybe it will be easier to just say to everyone I had facial surgery and deal with the awkwardness from that.... :'( Dont know why I hate Makeup so much, lots of women do it everyday and probably even more trans women do that.

  •  

anjaq

So, maybe i should really just do nothing about scars then. The Kelocote and stuff makes the scar tissue thickness thinner - which seems to be the opposite of what I need at times. My scars tend to stretch, so maybe the tissue is already too thin...

  •  

AnonyMs

  •  

Faith

I didn't mean to present something that would cause anyone issues. It's why I said when in doubt, play it safe, and also do what the Dr says.

It works for what I use it for. I never use it on healing scars, only on healed scars. It promotes healing, for me, on other wounds. I don't have any of the issues stated in that report.

best to avoid it then, I don't want to be one to cause problems for someone else. I'll keep my opinions to myself from now on.
I left the door open, only a few came through. such is my life.
Bluesky:@faithnd.bsky.social

  •