Earlobe Reconstruction and Earlobe Reconstruction History: Difference between pages

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If you stretch your lobe past an inch or so, or you tear it, and then decide that you'd like to go "back to normal," surgical intervention will be required. As with all cosmetic surgery, a general rule is the more you spend the better a job you'll get.
Because [[Lobe|earlobe]] [[Stretching|stretching]] is one of humanity's oldest body modifications, [[Earlobe reconstruction|earlobe reconstruction]] surgery is one of its oldest forms of [[Plastic surgery|plastic surgery]]. Because large earlobes are essentially permanent (they rarely go back to "normal" if stretched too far), at any point in history where people with stretched lobes live with those without, there are people who regret their decisions and want to move from one group to another. Hence the need for a surgery that "corrects" ears from stretched to unstretched.


There are some piercers willing to do this procedure for clients, but realistically this is a job for a surgeon. It should also be noted that done in a non-surgical environment there may be bleeding risks that can not be adequately handled.
In [[India]] somewhere around 300 BC, a surgeon called [[Sushruta]] described a procedure for restoring stretched lobes that had been torn off — in India at the time earlobes had both spiritual/cultural and esthetic value and long ones were highly desirable, so if one was damaged there was a need to fix it. Sushruta's "fix" for this became the basis for pedical flap surgery which is still used today. In his text ''[[Sushruta Samhita]]'' he writes,


After the procedure a small linear scar will usually be left. This scar will reduce over several months, and CO2 laser resurfacing can all but eliminate any scar.
> A surgeon well versed in the knowledge of surgery should slice off a patch of living flesh from the cheek of a person devoid of earlobes in a manner so as to have one of its ends attached to (the cheek). Then the part where the artificial earlobe is to be made should be slightly scarified and the living flesh ... should be stuck to it.


The reconstructed earlobe can be re-pierced and even stretched again if desired.
Pretty impressive for well over two thousand years ago! Some writers have suggested that it is India's experimentation with body modification that lead them to develop medical technologies that wouldn't become common in the West for millennia later.


{| class="wikitable"
In later times, the [[Roman|Romans]] went the other direction. In the 1st century AD the writer Celcus describes in his medical encyclopedia a procedure to convert stretched ears back into normal lobes. As you can see from the illustration below, it's an almost identical procedure to the ones doctors use in modern times:
|-
| [[File:Earlobe_Reconstruction-1.jpg|thumb|Earlobe Reconstruction-1.jpg]]
| [[File:LobeReductionCollage1ByJonathanMartinez.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Lobe Reduction by [[Jonathan Martinez]]]]
|}


See Also
[[File:Earlobe_Reconstruction_History-1.gif|center]]
* [[Earlobe Removal|Earlobe Removal]]
* [[Earlobe Reconstruction History|Earlobe Reconstruction History]]


Entries related to this risk
In more recent history, plastic surgery has been used to Westernize "savages" who wish to transition from Africa, South America, and other regions where stretching is still the norm, as well as to correct the mistakes of individuals who stretched farther than they turned out to be able to handle in their life.
* [[Stretched Earlobe Piercing|Stretched Earlobe Piercing]]
 
''(Reference: "Ancient Inventions" by Peter James and Nick Thorpe)''
 
== See Also ==
 
* [[Earlobe Stretching|Earlobe Stretching]]

Latest revision as of 03:01, 17 September 2023

Because earlobe stretching is one of humanity's oldest body modifications, earlobe reconstruction surgery is one of its oldest forms of plastic surgery. Because large earlobes are essentially permanent (they rarely go back to "normal" if stretched too far), at any point in history where people with stretched lobes live with those without, there are people who regret their decisions and want to move from one group to another. Hence the need for a surgery that "corrects" ears from stretched to unstretched.

In India somewhere around 300 BC, a surgeon called Sushruta described a procedure for restoring stretched lobes that had been torn off — in India at the time earlobes had both spiritual/cultural and esthetic value and long ones were highly desirable, so if one was damaged there was a need to fix it. Sushruta's "fix" for this became the basis for pedical flap surgery which is still used today. In his text Sushruta Samhita he writes,

> A surgeon well versed in the knowledge of surgery should slice off a patch of living flesh from the cheek of a person devoid of earlobes in a manner so as to have one of its ends attached to (the cheek). Then the part where the artificial earlobe is to be made should be slightly scarified and the living flesh ... should be stuck to it.

Pretty impressive for well over two thousand years ago! Some writers have suggested that it is India's experimentation with body modification that lead them to develop medical technologies that wouldn't become common in the West for millennia later.

In later times, the Romans went the other direction. In the 1st century AD the writer Celcus describes in his medical encyclopedia a procedure to convert stretched ears back into normal lobes. As you can see from the illustration below, it's an almost identical procedure to the ones doctors use in modern times:

Earlobe Reconstruction History-1.gif

In more recent history, plastic surgery has been used to Westernize "savages" who wish to transition from Africa, South America, and other regions where stretching is still the norm, as well as to correct the mistakes of individuals who stretched farther than they turned out to be able to handle in their life.

(Reference: "Ancient Inventions" by Peter James and Nick Thorpe)

See Also