AI-translated archive post

[Lari Plastic Surgery] If you’re worried that epicanthoplasty restoration may make your eyes look too cramped, consider non-incisional epicanthoplasty.

Laree Plastic Surgery · 라리n성형 · June 22, 2023

A sharp-looking eye shape with the inner corners of the eyes pulled too far open can be a concern for anyone. Even without having had epicanthoplasty, the area near the inner corne...

AI translation notice

This page is an English translation of a Korean Naver Blog archive entry. For exact wording and source context, verify against the Korean archive original and the original Naver post.

Clinic: Laree Plastic Surgery

Original post date: June 22, 2023

Translated at: April 23, 2026 at 3:22 AM

Medical note: This translation does not guarantee medical accuracy or suitability for treatment decisions.

A sharp-looking eye shape with the inner corners of the eyes pulled too far open can be a concern for anyone.

Even without having had epicanthoplasty, the area near the inner corners of the eyes can still look sharp and give a bad impression,

or even after epicanthoplasty, the Mongolian fold may remain and create a hook-like shape.

In such cases, rather than adding more opening surgery like epicanthoplasty restoration or non-incisional epicanthoplasty,

a different procedure should be used to improve it.

[Lari Plastic Surgery] If you’re worried that epicanthoplasty restoration may make your eyes look too cramped, consider non-incisional epicanthoplasty. image 1

Epicanthoplasty restoration is a procedure that brings together the separated inner corners of the eyes,

and after surgery, the space between the eyebrows may become slightly wider, or the inner corners of the eyes may feel more tightly closed.

So for people who have never had epicanthoplasty, non-incisional epicanthoplasty is usually performed instead of epicanthoplasty restoration.

Non-incisional epicanthoplasty is also a type of epicanthoplasty restoration, but it is a procedure somewhere between epicanthoplasty restoration and epicanthoplasty.

Rather than closing off the front part of the eye completely, it lightly covers only the exposed lacrimal caruncle area that has been pulled open.

Depending on the eye shape, there are cases where epicanthoplasty restoration is more suitable and cases where non-incisional epicanthoplasty is more suitable.

If you want correction within a moderate range, non-incisional epicanthoplasty is used.

[Lari Plastic Surgery] If you’re worried that epicanthoplasty restoration may make your eyes look too cramped, consider non-incisional epicanthoplasty. image 2

Some people worry because the inner corner of the eye after surgery feels more closed than expected.

However, the skin that was gathered right after surgery naturally stretches and settles in place with eye movement,

so the double-eyelid line connected to the inner eye corner that looked like an in-line shape 1 to 2 weeks after surgery

will protrude slightly outward again by 4 months after surgery, reducing the feeling of tightness.

The scar also settles in the same way, and the incision line that appeared in a downward diagonal shape after surgery

can be seen gradually fading and becoming lighter over time.

[Lari Plastic Surgery] If you’re worried that epicanthoplasty restoration may make your eyes look too cramped, consider non-incisional epicanthoplasty. image 3 [Lari Plastic Surgery] If you’re worried that epicanthoplasty restoration may make your eyes look too cramped, consider non-incisional epicanthoplasty. image 4

Continue browsing

Keep exploring this clinic's public source trail

Return to the source archive for more translated posts, or open the Korean clinic profile to compare other public channels.