Vital Discourse
Rhinoplasty is one of the most requested cosmetic procedures in the world — and one of the most misunderstood. In this episode of Vital Discourse, Dr. Ben Cilento and Dr. Lee Mandel break down everything patients need to know before deciding to change their nose. They open with candidacy: rhinoplasty is subjective in a way septoplasty isn't, which means the surgeon-patient relationship and shared aesthetic vision matter enormously. Dr. Ben walks through his assessment process — starting with whether the patient's concerns match what he actually sees, screening for body dysmorphic syndrome, evaluating nasal function before making any cosmetic changes, and using Photoshop (not morphing software) to give patients a realistic preview without creating false expectations. Dr. Lee explains why he refuses to use morphing programs like Mirror entirely — citing litigation risk and the gap between what a computer renders and what hands can actually do. The doctors cover the septum's critical role in rhinoplasty outcomes — "as the septum goes, so goes the nose" — and why experienced ENT-trained facial plastic surgeons almost always address the septum even when patients present for cosmetic work alone. They're candid about the inherent difficulty of rhinoplasty: cartilage doesn't have its own blood supply, heals unpredictably, and can shift months after a technically perfect surgery. Calvin Johnson, arguably one of the greatest rhinoplasty surgeons who ever lived, still had a 3-4% revision rate after 45 years. Recovery expectations are covered in detail — taping, nasal splints, the swollen pig nose that isn't permanent, bruising timelines by skin tone, the 1 month / 3 month / 1 year swelling milestones, steroids, hyperbaric oxygen, and nitro paste. The episode draws a clear line between cosmetic and functional rhinoplasty, explains what insurance will and won't cover, and addresses patients who try to blend the two. Dr. Ben is direct about the ethical line: dictating what you actually did means you can't hide cosmetic work as functional — and the doctors don't try. The episode closes with a frank comparison of facial plastic surgery training versus general plastic surgery training — 5-7 years of face-specific work versus a 2-week rhinoplasty course — and why that starting point difference is enormous even if it narrows over a decade of practice. The key message: rhinoplasty can absolutely improve your life — but it requires the right surgeon, the right expectations, and an honest conversation about what it can and can't do. YouTube Chapters: 00:00 Intro – Who Is a Candidate for Rhinoplasty? 01:14 It's Subjective — Why Rhinoplasty Is a Team Decision 02:33 Screening for Body Dysmorphic Syndrome — When to Say No 03:50 Nasal Function Assessment Before Any Cosmetic Work 04:46 Morphing Programs, Photoshop, and Why Dr. Lee Won't Use Mirror 06:31 Magazine Photos and Realistic Expectations 09:17 "You Can't Make Chicken Salad Out of Chicken Shit" 10:10 What Rhinoplasty Can and Can't Do for Your Life 11:39 How Many Patients Do They Turn Down? 13:45 The Septum's Role in Rhinoplasty — "As the Septum Goes, So Goes the Nose" 16:16 Why ENT-Trained Facial Plastic Surgeons Almost Always Fix the Septum 17:08 Two Buckets of Rhinoplasty Failure — What Goes Wrong and When 18:13 Why Rhinoplasty Is One of the Hardest Surgeries in Facial Plastics 19:52 The Vagaries of Healing — Why Cartilage Doesn't Behave 20:44 Calvin Johnson's 3-4% Revision Rate After 45 Years 21:16 Recovery — Taping, Splints, and the Temporary Pig Nose 22:59 Bruising Timelines, Skin Tone, and Arnica 23:23 The 1 Month / 3 Month / 1 Year Swelling Milestones 23:41 Steroids, Hyperbaric Oxygen, and Nitro Paste 26:19 Cosmetic vs. Functional Rhinoplasty — What's the Difference? 27:17 Functional Rhinoplasty and Insurance Coverage 29:00 Tip Ptosis, Nasal Valve Collapse, and Getting Insurance to Pay 31:15 The Columellar Strut — The 5-Minute Fix Surgeons Do for Free 32:44 The Goldman Septoplasty and the Insurance Gray Zone 33:36 "My Nose Got a Hump From a Broken Nose — Will Insurance Cover It?" 34:11 The Ethical Line — Why They Don't Blur Cosmetic and Functional 36:24 Facial Plastic Surgeon vs. General Plastic Surgeon — The Real Difference 37:48 5-7 Years Face-Specific Training vs. a 2-Week Rhinoplasty Course 39:35 Open vs. Closed Rhinoplasty — Does the Incision Matter? 41:17 Preservation Rhinoplasty and Why Technique Matters Less Than Mastery 41:57 Closing — What We Learned Today If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Podcasts.
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