2023.08.04
Other
Winking and biting
Hello. My name is Kuroda, Deputy Director.
The end of the rainy season has been announced and summer is in full swing.
Now, let's talk about winking.
Huh? A wink? The singer?
No, it's not. It's that thing that signals by closing one eye.
The topic is about winking and double line encroachment.
CONTENTS
Double line encroachment
Some people say, "I'm worried about the double line digging in."
Many people seem to look at their scars in the mirror with a wink.
As a cosmetic surgeon, I feel that "of course it will bite.
Let me tell you why.
Blepharoplasty is a surgical procedure that creates a connection between the skin and the tissue that is pulled back into the eyelid when the eyelid is opened. (For a more technical explanation, the tissue that drives the retraction may be the levator tendon membrane, the retropubic septum, or the anterior tissues of the eyelid plate.)
As the eyelid is opened, the skin is pulled back by its connection. The skin on the brow side is covered from above by the skin being pulled in, creating a double fold. This logic is the same for both incisional and implantation double-exposed eyelids, as well as for natural double-exposed eyelids.
On the other hand, when the eyelid is closed, the tissue that pulls the eyelid back is at rest. Instead, the orbicularis oculi muscle works to keep the eyelid from opening. The wrinkles that form when the eyelids are tightly closed are the result of the orbicularis oculi muscle.
Here is the main issue.
Winking makes the bite stronger.
The human brain is clumsy.
They cannot dexterously command one eye to close and the other to open.
In winking, the eyelids are trying to open, but the orbicularis oculi muscle is consciously engaged to force them closed.
This creates a tug-of-war between the muscles that want to close the eye and the muscles that want to open the eye at the double line. This is a tug-of-war between the muscles that want to close and the muscles that want to open the eye.
What happens when a tug-of-war occurs between muscles at one point on the skin of the eyelid?
Yes.The bite will be stronger."The first is the
The harder you try to look at the scars in the mirror, the more you will force yourself to look at the scars, and the more the biting will intensify.
The difference can be clearly seen if you shoot a video and ask the audience to compare the winking state and the state with both eyes naturally closed.

There are cases where the bite is strong even when both eyes are naturally closed, but it seems that quite a few people evaluate only the winking state and feel that the bite is strong.
He told us that he could not confirm his own eyelid encroachment visible to those around him in the winking state.
Thank you again for reading this issue to the end.
Assistant Director Daiki Kuroda
#Cosmetic Surgery Yoyamatogatari Series

Supervisor of this article

vice president (of a hospital, clinic, etc.)
Daiki Kuroda
OHKI KURODA

