Revision rhinoplasty addresses unsatisfactory aesthetic results, persistent functional problems, or breathing difficulties from a previous nose surgery. It's one of the most technically demanding procedures in plastic surgery — substantially more complex than primary rhinoplasty due to scar tissue, distorted anatomy, and reduced native cartilage availability. Assoc. Prof. Dr. Ayhan Işık Erdal (MD, FACS, FEBOPRAS) has extensive experience in revision cases, with international patients representing a significant portion of the revision practice. This page details when revision is appropriate, what's involved, costs, and what UK and international patients should know before booking.
Revision rhinoplasty (also called secondary rhinoplasty or corrective nose surgery) is surgery to correct results from a previous rhinoplasty. The procedure addresses both aesthetic concerns (nose shape, asymmetry, projection issues) and functional concerns (breathing difficulty, nasal valve collapse, septal problems).
Estimates of how often primary rhinoplasty needs revision vary substantially in the literature, depending on how 'revision' is defined. Conservative estimates from peer-reviewed plastic surgery literature suggest 10–15% of primary rhinoplasty patients ultimately undergo revision. Higher-volume specialist surgeons report lower revision rates (5–10% for primaries they performed). Revision rates relate to multiple factors: case complexity, surgeon experience, patient expectations, primary technique appropriateness, and individual healing patterns.
The waiting period is critical and non-negotiable in most cases. Premature revision substantially increases complication risk and reduces success probability.
Several specific factors make revision substantially more challenging than primary rhinoplasty:
Send photos via WhatsApp or contact form including: photos before your primary surgery (if available), immediate post-primary surgery photos, current photos showing your concerns, and timeline of when previous surgery occurred. Include: front view, profile (both left and right), three-quarter view, base view showing nostrils. Document your specific concerns: aesthetic, functional, or both.
Dr. Erdal personally reviews each revision case. Initial response within 24 hours indicates: whether revision is technically feasible for your concerns, what techniques would likely be required (open vs closed approach, grafting if needed), realistic outcome expectations, expected operative time and complexity, all-inclusive package quote in your preferred currency.
For complex revision cases, a video consultation may be scheduled. This allows discussion of your specific concerns, review of your previous operative report (if obtainable from previous surgeon), and detailed surgical planning conversation. Approximately 30–45 minutes.
Standard 7–10 day stay. Day 1 in-person consultation with Dr. Erdal at the clinic — final imaging, photographic documentation, surgical planning review, anaesthesia consultation. Surgical markings made.
Performed at JCI-accredited hospital. Operative time 3–4 hours typical (longer than primary 1.5–2.5 hours). General anaesthesia by specialist anaesthetist. Overnight observation in private hospital suite.
Day 2 hospital discharge to hotel. Days 3–7 recovery with regular check-ins. Cast removal at day 7. Final pre-discharge consultation with Dr. Erdal. Cleared for return flight.
WhatsApp access to Dr. Erdal personally for 12 months. Photo and video reviews at 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months. Specific revision case follow-up may extend beyond 12 months given the longer maturation timeline of revision cases.
Cartilage grafting is required in many revision cases because primary surgery often removed too much native cartilage. Different graft sources have specific characteristics:
If sufficient septal cartilage remains from primary surgery, this is the first choice. Same anatomic source as primary nose, no additional incisions needed, structurally similar to native cartilage. Limitations: previous septoplasty may have removed too much; insufficient quantity for major reconstruction.
Most commonly used revision graft source. Harvested through a small incision behind the ear (concha cymba or concha cavum), completely hidden from view. Provides good structural support and curved shape useful for nasal tip reconstruction. Healing at the donor site is straightforward — no functional impact on ear function. Approximately 2 cm × 2 cm of cartilage available per ear.
Reserved for major reconstruction or when ear cartilage is insufficient. Harvested through a small horizontal incision under the breast (typically right side). Provides large amounts of structural cartilage suitable for major nasal framework reconstruction. Donor site healing involves several weeks of mild discomfort. Used when revision involves significant structural rebuilding (saddle nose deformity, severe over-resection, complex multi-revision cases).
Donor cartilage processed for safe surgical use. Used in select cases where autologous (own) cartilage is insufficient or contraindicated. Functionally similar to autologous rib cartilage with the advantage of avoiding donor site morbidity. Slight risk of resorption over time. Used rarely; most surgeons including Dr. Erdal prefer autologous (your own) cartilage where possible.
Silicone, Gore-Tex, or porous polyethylene implants. Higher long-term complication rates (extrusion, infection) compared to autologous cartilage. Used rarely in modern practice; mostly avoided in revision cases.
Revision technique selection is more nuanced than primary technique selection. The closed approach has limitations in revision; open is generally preferred for most revision needs.
Dr. Erdal performs both approaches in revision based on specific case requirements. The technique is selected to produce your best outcome — not from blanket commitment to either approach. See detailed technique comparison for the general primary case discussion.
Revision rhinoplasty pricing varies substantially across markets. Below is the realistic 2026 international comparison:
| Country | Revision range | Typical inclusions |
|---|---|---|
| United States | $12,000 – $25,000+ | Surgeon fee only typically |
| United Kingdom | £8,000 – £20,000+ | Surgeon fee only typically |
| Germany | €8,000 – €15,000 | Variable |
| Australia | A$15,000 – A$28,000+ | Surgeon fee only typically |
| Canada | C$14,000 – C$22,000 | Variable |
| Istanbul (Dr. Erdal) | €4,500 – €6,500 all-inclusive | Surgery, hospital, hotel, transfers, 12-month follow-up |
Important context: Revision pricing varies more than primary pricing because revision complexity varies more (some are minor touch-ups, others are major structural rebuilding). Within the €4,500–€6,500 Istanbul range: minor revision approximately €4,500, complex revision with rib cartilage grafting approximately €6,500. Specific quote provided after photo review.
Surgeon selection for revision is more critical than for primary. Specific verification matters:
Revision patients often have a different psychological context than primary patients. Acknowledging this matters for outcomes.
Initial photo-based remote consultation is free and provides initial feasibility assessment, technique recommendation, and all-inclusive package quote. Detailed video consultation if needed is also typically free for revision cases (given complexity, video discussion is often valuable). In-person consultation in Istanbul is included in the surgical package.
Strongly encouraged. The operative report from your previous surgery contains valuable information: specific technique used, structures removed or modified, graft material used (if any), specific anatomic findings. This information substantially improves revision planning. If your previous surgeon will not provide the operative report, you can sometimes obtain it through your country's medical records request process. Dr. Erdal can usually plan revision without it but the report adds value when available.
Functional concerns are addressed alongside aesthetic concerns in revision rhinoplasty. Common functional issues include: nasal valve collapse (whistling or restricted airflow during inhalation), persistent septal deviation, post-surgical narrowing of the airway. Revision can address both functional and aesthetic concerns in one operation when clinically appropriate. Detailed pre-operative breathing assessment determines the specific functional component of your revision.
Yes, in specific scenarios: previous surgery less than 12 months ago (premature for accurate planning); patient expectations that cannot be realistically met; severe tissue compromise from multiple previous surgeries where additional revision may produce harm rather than improvement; active body dysmorphic disorder (psychiatric treatment recommended before considering further surgery); medical comorbidities increasing surgical risk beyond acceptable threshold. Quality revision surgeons recognize these scenarios and decline to operate when appropriate.
Generally similar timeline but with specific differences: slightly more bruising in early recovery (more extensive dissection through scar tissue); slightly longer cast time in some cases (5–7 days standard but may extend); final results take 12–18 months to fully appear vs 12 months for primary (deep tissue changes take longer to resolve in re-operated noses); more variable swelling pattern (residual swelling may persist longer); slightly higher rate of minor complications. Day-by-day recovery experience is similar to primary.
Yes if medically appropriate. Standard timing: 12+ months after current revision before considering further revision. Most second revisions (3rd surgery) require similar approach to primary revision but with greater technical complexity. Beyond 3 surgeries, each subsequent intervention has progressively higher complication rates and lower predictable outcomes. Most experienced revision surgeons recommend conservative final results acceptance over indefinite revision pursuit.
Generally 2–3 revisions maximum for most cases. Each subsequent surgery adds: scar tissue, reduced tissue elasticity, compromised circulation, unpredictable healing. Many surgeons including Dr. Erdal will discuss the appropriateness of further revision if a case has had 3+ previous surgeries — the goal is producing your best realistic outcome, not pursuing perfection through unlimited surgery. Some severely multi-operated cases benefit from accepting current results and pursuing non-surgical refinements (filler, etc.).
Send photos and previous operative report (if available) for personal assessment within 24 hours.
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