Vital Discourse
About 40% of Americans have a deviated septum — and most of them have no idea it's behind their snoring, sleep apnea, chronic sinusitis, or mouth breathing. In this episode of Vital Discourse, Dr. Ben Cilento and Dr. Lee Mandel break down one of the most misunderstood and unfairly feared procedures in ENT: septoplasty. They open with a truth most patients need to hear — having a deviated septum doesn't automatically mean you need surgery. If you're asymptomatic, you leave it alone. But if secondary problems have started to build, that's when it matters. The doctors explain why deviated septums are so common, how they form at birth or during facial development, and why people often don't realize they've been mouth breathing their entire lives. They walk through what septoplasty looks like in 2026 — typically a 10-minute in-office procedure, no packing, no splints, 48 hours of rest and back to normal — a world away from the miserable recovery patients' parents endured. Dr. Lee covers bony vs. cartilaginous deviations and why the front of the septum is harder to fix. Dr. Ben explains the internal nasal valve, tension nose deformities, and the controlled technique that opens a nostril without perceptible cosmetic change. Both doctors are candid about revision rates: while individual surgeons quote 1-2% personal rates, the nationwide figure is closer to 30-40% — because patients who aren't fixed go somewhere else. Both report that roughly 40% of their septoplasties are revisions of other surgeons' work. The key message: septoplasty in 2026 is not what it used to be — but who does it absolutely matters. YouTube Chapters: 00:00 Intro – 40% of Americans Have a Deviated Septum 01:01 What Is the Nasal Septum and Why Does It Deviate? 02:27 Not Every Deviated Septum Needs to Be Fixed 04:08 This Is Not Your Parents' Septoplasty 05:49 How Secondary Problems Build Over Time 06:52 Bony vs. Cartilaginous Deviation – Why the Front Is Harder 08:25 Can You Treat It Without Surgery? 09:51 What Septoplasty Actually Looks Like in 2026 11:50 No Packing, No Splints – Why Recovery Is So Different Now 14:05 Is a 10-Minute Surgery Actually Simple? 16:51 Septoplasty vs. Rhinoplasty – Two Very Different Procedures 18:05 Wanted vs. Unwanted Cosmetic Changes 19:57 The Internal Nasal Valve and the 1-Millimeter Controlled Drop 21:43 How Do You Know If Your Septum Might Be Deviated? 22:57 Success Rate, Recurrence, and the Real Revision Numbers 24:57 40% of Their Septoplasties Are Revisions of Other Surgeons' Work 27:36 Closing – Surgery for Quality of Life, Not for Every Deviated Septum If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Podcasts.
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