Beauty Unveiled
Dr. Sturm offers a reality filter for anyone trying to decide what a “good nose” looks like in the age of edits, filters, and trending Instagram noses. She explains the two main aesthetics patients request, from ultra-cute “Barbie” noses to refined but natural noses that still feel like their own. Drawing on her surgical experience and even her own rhinoplasty journey, she walks through how to balance appearance, breathing, and long-term durability while making sure the nose fits a person’s face, features, and personality. Listeners learn how to use social media examples productively, what photos to bring to a consult, and how to communicate clearly with a surgeon so they do not end up with a copy-and-paste nose that does not feel like them. Subscribe to Beauty Unveiled on Apple [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/beauty-unveiled/id1733588960], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/1jDVRWtgL4ceLX2SZGPB4f?si=7672088da3c64bbc], and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@DrAngelaSturmMD]. Schedule a consult with Dr. Sturm HERE [https://www.drangelasturm.com/]. Follow Dr. Sturm on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/DrAngelaSturm/], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/drangelasturm/], and TikTok [https://tiktok.com/@drangelasturm]! Key Takeaways 1. Most patients arrive with strong ideas shaped by social media, often split between wanting a very small, scooped “Instagram nose” or a natural refinement of their existing nose, and very few fall in the middle. 2. The best rhinoplasty results fit the individual’s face, features, and personality, which is why imaging and multiple proposed outcomes are so important when deciding how much change is appropriate. 3. Social media can educate but also distort expectations, especially with on-table photos and early “reveal” videos that do not show swelling, healing time, or how a nose looks and functions years later. 4. A thoughtful rhinoplasty plan balances three priorities: harmony with the rest of the face, preservation of nasal breathing, and durability so the nose still looks intentional and stable 10 to 20 years after surgery. 5. The most helpful reference photos are of people whose skin thickness, facial structure, or ethnic features are similar, and it is crucial to identify what you like about each nose so your surgeon can translate that into a result that fits you rather than replicating the same nose for everyone. Timestamped Overview 00:00 The core question: defining a “good nose” when photos are filtered and celebrities deny surgery 00:00:21 The two main camps of nose goals in consultation: tiny, scooped Instagram-style noses versus natural, refined versions of a patient’s own nose 00:01:04 Why any nose design must fit the person’s face, personality, and overall presence, and how imaging helps visualize options 00:01:35 How patients often bring Instagram examples of very small, cute noses, and what attracts them to that look 00:02:01 The alternative ideal: straight, less “perfect” noses that embrace subtle individuality and imperfections 00:02:20 Why perfectly “too perfect” noses can look unnatural and how true normal noses always have minor asymmetries 00:02:37 The importance of discussing breathing and long-term stability when someone wants a very small nose 00:03:18 How over-resection can weaken nasal structure, affect airflow, and create problems years after surgery 00:03:21 The double-edged nature of social media in surgery, showcasing both helpful education and extreme, on-table transformations 00:03:40 How patients bring examples of what they definitely do not want alongside images they love 00:03:53 Why patient screenshots of the surgeon’s own work are especially helpful, since they often involve similar skin thickness or width 00:04:24 Limitations of reveal videos that show day 5 or day 7 results, and why early swelling can mislead expectations 00:04:53 How timelines appear compressed online, from surgery to reveal to one-year photos, versus the real experience of a year-long healing process 00:05:18 The value and downside of highly informed patients, and the need to reshape expectations around timing and final results 00:05:47 The risk that viral outcomes may not be the right aesthetic or structural choice for a particular person 00:05:55 Dr. Sturm’s own rhinoplasty story and her desire for a straight, natural dorsum rather than a tiny Barbie nose 00:06:26 How seeing many rhinoplasties in training helped her communicate precisely what she wanted 00:06:59 A “reality filter” for nose surgery: balancing nose shape with eyes, lips, jawline, body, and personality 00:07:20 Using imaging to show multiple possible outcomes, including “too far,” so patients can calibrate what feels right 00:08:00 The hierarchy of priorities: function first for breathing, then aesthetics, then long-term durability over decades 00:08:40 Why durability has become a major focus, aiming for a nose that remains stable rather than drifting more upturned or extreme over time 00:09:27 Practical advice for bringing photos to consultation and choosing examples similar to your own anatomy 00:09:48 How Dr. Sturm asks what exactly a patient likes in each photo, such as slope, tip size, or rotation, to guide planning 00:10:20 Concerns about every nose starting to look the same on some social media feeds and what that reveals about a surgeon’s aesthetic 00:10:40 The issue with very high-volume, one-style practices and why that can be a plus or a mismatch depending on your goals 00:11:20 The importance of a nose that respects gender, ethnicity, background, and personality rather than copying a single trend 00:11:45 Final encouragement to maintain open communication with the surgeon about goals, limits, and what will truly work for you See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.
100 episodes
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