What Is Preservation Rhinoplasty?
Preservation rhinoplasty is one of the most significant advances in rhinoplasty technique of the last two decades. Unlike traditional structural rhinoplasty, which removes cartilage and bone to reduce a dorsal hump and then reconstructs the framework with grafts, preservation rhinoplasty keeps the native dorsum completely intact and repositions it as a unit to lower the profile. The nasal ligaments, periosteum, and overlying soft tissue envelope remain undisturbed — preserving the natural anatomy rather than replacing it.
For patients seeking preservation rhinoplasty in New Jersey, the technique offers a fundamentally different result: a dorsal line that reflects light the way a natural nose does, with no visible irregularities, no open-roof deformity risk, and significantly less post-operative swelling in the bridge area. Dr. Rafizadeh evaluates every rhinoplasty patient for preservation candidacy as part of his standard consultation.
How Preservation Rhinoplasty Works
The key surgical concept is repositioning, not removal. The dorsum — comprised of the nasal bones, upper lateral cartilages, and the underlying septum — is treated as a single structural unit. Once the bony and cartilaginous attachments are carefully released, the entire dorsum can be lowered using one of two maneuvers, chosen based on each patient's anatomy and the degree of reduction needed.
Push-Down vs. Let-Down Technique
The two primary preservation maneuvers differ in how the dorsal repositioning is accomplished:
| Feature | Push-Down | Let-Down |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Dorsum compressed inferiorly after lateral osteotomies | Bony base wedge removed; dorsum descends into space |
| Best for | Moderate hump reductions | Larger reductions, wider nasal bones |
| Bony work | Lateral osteotomies only | Lateral + transverse osteotomies + wedge removal |
| Stability | Excellent for appropriate candidates | Very stable — bone settles into natural position |
| Swelling | Minimal dorsal swelling | Slightly more bony swelling, resolves well |
Preservation vs. Structural Rhinoplasty
Traditional structural rhinoplasty excises the hump by removing bone and cartilage, then closes the resulting open roof by medialization of the nasal bones. This requires spreader grafts to prevent internal valve collapse and often additional tip grafts to balance the reduced dorsum. The result depends heavily on the quality of grafts placed and how the soft tissue re-drapes over a rebuilt framework.
Preservation technique bypasses this reconstruction entirely. Because the dorsum is repositioned rather than removed, there is no open-roof deformity, no graft dependency, and the natural nasal ligaments continue to support the soft tissue exactly as they always have. For patients with a straightforward dorsal hump and otherwise well-supported anatomy, this typically translates to a more predictable, natural-looking result. See also: Open vs. Closed Rhinoplasty approach selection →
“The best rhinoplasty is often the one that changes the least. Preservation technique lets us correct what needs correcting while keeping everything else exactly as nature intended.”
— Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh, MD FACS
Who Is a Good Candidate?
Preservation rhinoplasty is not appropriate for every patient. The ideal candidate has:
- A dorsal hump as the primary concern
- Normal or near-normal tip support — minimal tip work needed
- Skin that can accommodate a repositioned framework (medium thickness preferred)
- No prior rhinoplasty that altered the nasal ligaments or dorsal anatomy
- Realistic goals focused on natural profile improvement
Patients with very thick skin, major tip concerns requiring open cartilage work, significant structural weakness, or prior rhinoplasty may be better served by a combined approach or traditional structural technique. Dr. Rafizadeh will assess your anatomy candidly during consultation and recommend only what will produce the best long-term result for your specific nose.
Recovery & What to Expect
Days 1–7: Nasal splint worn. Some swelling and bruising around the eyes — less dorsal bruising than traditional rhinoplasty because the periosteum is preserved. Rest at home recommended.
Week 2: Splint removed. Most patients are presentable for limited social activity. The dorsum looks dramatically improved.
Weeks 3–6: Return to most normal activities. The bridge continues to refine; tip swelling resolves more gradually.
Months 6–12: Final result visible as all residual swelling resolves. The preserved dorsum typically shows very natural light reflection from early in recovery.
Preservation Rhinoplasty Cost in New Jersey
The cost of preservation rhinoplasty in NJ varies based on the complexity of the procedure, whether tip work is combined, anesthesia and facility fees, and other patient-specific factors. Because preservation technique typically requires fewer grafts than structural rhinoplasty, operative time is often shorter for straightforward cases. All pricing is discussed during your personal consultation with Dr. Rafizadeh after he has evaluated your anatomy and goals. To schedule, call (973) 267-0928 or request a consultation online.