Just as clothes with a front slit tend to catch the eye, eyes that have had a front slit procedure often attract more attention as well. Since the eyes are the windows to the mind, they are the part of the face people look at most, whether the front slit turned out well or poorly, so even a small change at the inner corner of the eye stands out.


In fact, the most important thing to look at in front epicanthoplasty is not whether the eyes have become longer or how much of the lacrimal caruncle is exposed. The most important point to check in a front slit procedure is whether the hook-shaped Mongolian fold at the inner corner of the eye has been properly removed or corrected.

If the hook-shaped Mongolian fold at the inner corner of the eye remains, the raised outer corner of the eye can look even more slanted, and the overall impression can appear sharper. Lowering the outer corner of the eye through a lateral canthoplasty is important for softening the impression, but correcting the Mongolian fold at the inner corner also plays a major role in making the face look gentler.

If you look at the photos posted in #frontslitreview where the Mongolian fold has been well corrected, you can clearly see that the before-and-after results are different and that the face has become much gentler. In that sense, removing the hook-shaped Mongolian fold is the goal of front slit surgery, and it plays an important role in creating a gentle impression.

The innovative front slit design developed through numerous front slit surgeries at Lari Plastic Surgery, #NoVisibleScarringFrontSlit, is an appropriate surgical method for removing this Mongolian fold. It can remove only the Mongolian fold, and it is also possible to remove the Mongolian fold while closing or opening the lacrimal caruncle further.

