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Regenerative Deep Plane in Brazil

Regenerative Deep Plane:
Deep Plane Facelift with Fat Grafting

By Dr. Walter Zamarian Jr. · Updated: 24/05/2026

Regenerative Deep Plane: Deep Plane facelift with fat grafting and stem cells

Dr. Walter Zamarian Jr. is a plastic surgeon in Brazil focused on Deep Plane facelift surgery. With over 20 years of experience and more than 8,000 plastic surgeries performed, he trained at the Ivo Pitanguy Clinic and his Deep Plane facelift education includes learning from Dr. Tim Marten and Dr. Mike Nayak in the United States during ASAPS meetings. He is a member of SBCP (Brazilian Society of Plastic Surgery) and ASPS (American Society of Plastic Surgeons). He sees patients from across Brazil and internationally at his clinic in Londrina, Paraná. CRM-PR 17,388 | RQE 15,688.

The deep plane facelift is a technically demanding facial rejuvenation technique. Unlike traditional facelifts that mainly pull the skin and place superficial SMAS sutures, the deep plane releases the four retaining ligaments that anchor facial structures to the bone. This allows me to reposition muscles, fat, and skin as a single unit, in a vertical vector that reproduces the natural direction of youth. In my experience of over twenty years and eight thousand plastic surgeries performed, this approach can deliver natural and durable results when correctly indicated. My training at the Ivo Pitanguy Clinic and my Deep Plane facelift education, including learning from Dr. Tim Marten and Dr. Mike Nayak in the United States during ASAPS meetings, gave me the foundation to offer, here in Londrina, a deep plane facelift aligned with international facial rejuvenation standards. As a member of SBCP and ASPS, I remain regularly updated with speciality advances.

If you have researched facelifts, you have probably come across dozens of different techniques: SMAS, MACS, minilift, endoscopic lift. With so many options, it is natural to feel confused. Let me simplify: after two decades as a facelift specialist in Brazil, studying advanced techniques in the world -- including Deep Plane learning during ASAPS meetings in the United States -- I made a definitive decision. I now focus my facelift practice on the deep plane facelift for appropriately selected patients at my clinic in Londrina, Brazil. The reason is anatomical: the technique allows deep structural repositioning, neck treatment and fat grafting to be planned together. International patients seeking a facelift in Brazil will find a structured medical assessment, hospital-based surgery and clear follow-up planning.

The deep plane is not just an evolution of the traditional facelift. It is a completely different philosophy of how to treat facial ageing. While conventional techniques pull the skin and suture the SMAS superficially, the deep plane goes further: it releases the ligaments that attach your face to the bone, allowing me to reposition the entire facial structure back to its youthful position. The result? A truly rejuvenated face, without that stretched appearance that often scares those considering cosmetic surgery in Brazil. Whether you are wondering "how much does a facelift cost in Brazil" or researching an experienced facelift surgeon in Brazil, I invite you to continue reading and understand why patients from around the world travel to Londrina for this procedure.

Why I chose to focus on deep plane

After more than eight thousand surgeries over twenty years as a plastic surgeon in Londrina, Brazil, I consider the deep plane more suitable for the type of facial ageing I treat most often than the techniques I previously performed. This is not an opinion based on theory. It is a conclusion that arose from observing my own results, comparing patient satisfaction, and following the evolution of techniques in reference plastic surgery centres around the world. My training at the Ivo Pitanguy Institute and subsequent Deep Plane learning during ASAPS meetings in the United States shaped my commitment to this facial rejuvenation technique.

The fundamental difference lies in the depth of the work. In the deep plane, I release four facial retention ligaments that you have probably never heard of: the zygomatic ligament (which holds the cheekbone), the masseteric (side of the face), the mandibular (which contributes to the bulldog appearance) and the cervical (in the neck). When these ligaments are released, the entire muscle-fat-skin system can be lifted as a single unit, in a vertical vector that mimics the natural direction of youth.

Compare this to traditional techniques that only pull the skin laterally and place a few superficial sutures in the SMAS. It is like trying to raise a tent by only pulling the outer fabric, versus lifting the entire support structure. This is why the visual effect can be more anatomical and natural when the indication is correct.

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"In this video, you will discover all the areas of the face that are treated during a facelift with fat grafting:"

The fat graft: volume restoration and regenerative signalling

I usually perform the deep plane facelift combined with fat grafting, a combination I call regenerative deep plane. While the deep plane repositions tissues that have descended with ageing, the grafted fat restores selected facial volume and may support skin quality through regenerative signalling. The nanofat I use contains adipose-derived stem cells, known as ADSCs, which are associated in the medical literature with collagen stimulation and tissue-quality improvement. I prepare three different types of fat for specific functions: millifat to restore deep volume, microfat to soften furrows, and nanofat to support skin quality. At my clinic in Brazil, deep plane facelift planning commonly includes this three-dimensional grafting when it is clinically indicated, because treating sagging alone may leave volume loss and skin quality untreated.

If the deep plane repositions the structures that have descended over time, the fat graft addresses a different component of facial ageing: volume loss and tissue quality. The fat I remove from your body and graft into your face contains cells derived from adipose tissue, known in the medical literature as ADSCs.

These cells can secrete growth factors associated with collagen production, microcirculation and skin-quality improvement. Scientific studies describe measurable changes in collagen and fine wrinkles after fat grafting, although the degree of improvement varies by patient, technique, healing and ageing pattern.

The three types of fat I use

I prepare the fat in three different ways, each with a specific function:

  • Millifat graft (particles of two to three millimetres): I use it to restore volume in areas that have lost deep fat, such as the cheekbones and the temporal region.
  • Microfat graft (particles of half to one millimetre): ideal for filling more superficial grooves, such as the nasolabial fold and marionette lines.
  • Nanofat graft (emulsion rich in regenerative cells): I apply it superficially to selected areas to support skin quality, texture and radiance when indicated.

The fat harvest is done through a small liposuction, usually from the inner thighs or lower abdomen. The fat is washed, centrifuged, and carefully separated. This process adds about an hour to the surgery, but the results justify every minute.

Why fat grafting differs from fillers

Unlike hyaluronic acid, which the body gradually absorbs, the portion of grafted fat that survives the initial healing period can be long lasting. Fillers and fat grafting have different roles: fillers are useful for selected contour corrections, while fat grafting can restore broader volume loss and may contribute to tissue-quality improvement. The best choice depends on anatomy, previous treatments, expectations and safety.

The deep treatment of the neck

Many patients come to my office focused only on their face, but I immediately notice that their neck needs special attention. A facelift without proper neck treatment is like renovating the facade of a house and leaving the garden abandoned. The mismatch is glaring.

In the deep plane, the dissection naturally extends to the neck, releasing the cervical ligament and allowing me to treat structures that superficial techniques simply cannot reach:

Platysmaplasty: correcting the neck bands

The platysma muscle extends from the jawline to the collarbone. Over time, its medial edges separate and form those two vertical cords so characteristic of cervical ageing. Through a small incision under the chin, I bring these bands closer together at the midline with precise sutures. The result is a smooth and defined neck.

Subplatysmal fat: eliminating the deep double chin

Below the platysma, there is a layer of fat that conventional liposuction cannot reach. In the deep plane, I have direct access to this fat and can remove it under direct vision, sculpting the angle between the chin and neck precisely.

Digastric muscle: refining the contour

In some patients, the anterior belly of the digastric muscle contributes to a bulky appearance under the chin. When necessary, I perform a partial reduction of this muscle to create a more elegant neck contour.

Submandibular gland: when excess is a problem

The submandibular salivary gland can become prominent with age, creating a bulge in the lateral neck region. In cases where this affects the aesthetic result, I only remove the excess glandular tissue, preserving the normal function of the gland.

This level of detail in neck treatment is one factor that can separate a refined result from a limited one.

The Auersvald haemostatic mesh: no drains and lower bruising risk

One of my patients' biggest concerns is the postoperative period. Drains, prolonged swelling, risk of bruising. I completely understand. That's why I incorporated into my technique the haemostatic mesh developed by plastic surgeons André and Luiz Auersvald from Curitiba.

The technique consists of transfixing stitches with nylon thread that pass through the skin and the SMAS-platysma, creating a mesh that reduces the dead space where blood and fluids could accumulate. The result is three practical benefits:

  • Eliminates the need for drains in my protocol: patients do not usually go home with facial drains.
  • Helps reduce the risk of haematoma and bruising: it reduces dead space, one of the factors involved in fluid accumulation.
  • Improves the contour of the neck: the mesh keeps the tissues in the ideal position during healing.

I remove the mesh in forty-eight hours at the office with planned discomfort control. The small marks from the mesh usually fade as healing progresses.

Why this matters to you

Haematoma is one of the main concerns in facelift surgery and is reported in the medical literature at variable rates. Besides discomfort, it can compromise recovery and occasionally require treatment. With the haemostatic mesh, this concern is reduced but not eliminated, so careful follow-up remains essential.

Deep Plane vs SMAS Facelift: Technique Comparison

Patients often ask about the differences between facelift techniques. This table summarizes the key points I discuss during consultations at my clinic in Brazil:

Criteria Deep Plane (Dr. Zamarian) Traditional SMAS Mini Facelift / MACS
Dissection plane Sub-SMAS deep, releases 4 retaining ligaments Superficial to SMAS or plication Limited to mid-face
Vector of lift Vertical (natural direction of youth) Lateral (may look pulled) Oblique
Longevity 10–15 years 5–10 years 3–5 years
Neck treatment Comprehensive (platysmaplasty + subplatysmal fat) Partial Does not treat neck
Natural appearance Highly natural result Risk of pulled look Natural but limited
Fat grafting Yes (nano, micro and millifat with ADSCs) Optional Rarely combined
Drains No drains (Auersvald haemostatic mesh) Usually with drains No drains
Social recovery 2 weeks 2–3 weeks 1–2 weeks

I focus on the deep plane for suitable patients because it allows anatomical repositioning, deep neck treatment and fat grafting to be planned together. The indication is always individual and depends on anatomy, health status, expectations and risk assessment.

Your fears are legitimate. Let me address them.

Over two decades, I've heard thousands of patients express the same fears. Each fear is legitimate and deserves an honest answer.

Fear of looking stretched

This is the number one fear, and rightly so. We all know someone who had a facelift and ended up with that artificial look, pulled eyes, frozen expression. This happens when the surgeon only pulls the skin, applying excessive tension in the wrong direction.

The deep plane addresses this problem by releasing the ligaments and lifting the deeper structure, so the skin can be redraped with less surface tension. The traction vector is vertical, mimicking the direction opposite to gravity, rather than simply lateral as in older techniques. The goal is a rested and natural appearance, not an operated look.

Fear of general anaesthesia

Any surgery under general anaesthesia deserves respect. Modern anaesthesia is carefully monitored, but it still carries risks that must be assessed before surgery. I work with experienced anaesthetists who monitor every vital parameter throughout the procedure, and pre-operative cardiac clearance helps identify relevant risks before entering the operating theatre.

Fear of swelling and recovery

There will be swelling, I won't lie. The first three days are the most intense. But the haemostatic mesh significantly reduces both swelling and bruising. Most of my patients are presentable for social commitments in two weeks. The result improves progressively over months as the tissues settle into their new position.

Fear of scars

The incisions are strategically positioned: within the hair in the temporal region, in the natural fold in front of the ear, contouring the lobe and continuing behind the ear. When healing is favourable, they tend to become discreet. The incision under the chin, when necessary, is placed in a natural fold, but scar quality varies with biology, technique and postoperative care.

The real investment: facelift versus aesthetic treatments

I need to be frank about something that few professionals have the courage to say: if you have real facial sagging, non-surgical procedures will not solve your problem. They may alleviate, disguise, or postpone it. But they will not fix it.

Do the math with me. A person trying to maintain a youthful appearance with aesthetic treatments spends, on average, per year:

  • Botulinum toxin (Botox): $350 to $700 (three sessions)
  • Fillers with hyaluronic acid: $525 to $1,400
  • Collagen biostimulators (Sculptra, Radiesse): $875 to $1,750
  • Ultraformer or HIFU: $1,050 to $2,275 (two sessions)
  • PDO lifting threads: $525 to $1,400
  • Facial lasers (Fotona and similar): $1,050 to $2,800

Adding it all up, we're talking about $4,375 to $10,500 per year on procedures that need to be repeated indefinitely. In ten years, the investment easily exceeds $43,750 to $87,500. And even so, the sagging remains there, hidden under layers of filler, masked by technologies that try to stimulate collagen that cannot overcome gravity.

The deep plane facelift costs a fraction of that

A deep plane facelift with fat grafting represents a one-time investment planned for long-term structural rejuvenation. When you divide the amount by the expected duration, the annualised cost may be lower than repeated temporary non-surgical treatments. For selected patients with real sagging, the surgical approach is often more structurally appropriate.

This doesn't mean you will never need anything again. Botulinum toxin, for example, is an excellent complement in the postoperative period to soften expression wrinkles on the forehead and around the eyes, areas that the facelift does not directly treat. But the structural foundation of your face will be restored for over a decade.

Procedures I Combine with the Deep Plane Facelift

The facelift addresses the middle and lower thirds of the face, as well as the neck. Other areas can benefit from complementary procedures that I perform at the same surgical time:

Blepharoplasty: Rejuvenation of the Eyes

The eyelids strongly influence the impression of facial ageing. Excess skin on the upper eyelids, under-eye bags on the lower eyelids, and deep dark circles can be assessed during the same surgical plan. The combination of a facelift with blepharoplasty can improve overall facial harmony when both procedures are indicated.

Brow Lift

Drooping eyebrows, especially on the outer side, can create an appearance of sadness and fatigue. A brow lift is an excellent way to open up the eye area and is a great complement to the deep plane facelift.

Buccal Fat Removal: Contour Definition

The removal of the buccal fat pads can further enhance the definition of facial contours in selected patients, especially those with a naturally round face.

Fat Grafting to the Hands

In selected patients, the hands can show ageing that contrasts with facial rejuvenation. Fat grafting to the hands can restore volume and may improve skin quality, complementing facial plastic surgery when clinically appropriate.

Botulinum Toxin in the Post-Operative Period

About three to four weeks after surgery, when the swelling has significantly subsided, botulinum toxin injections to the forehead, glabella and crow's feet may complement the result. Expression lines that the facelift does not directly address can be softened, and the overall plan can be maintained with periodic non-surgical care. In my clinic, we have a team of dermatologists who can administer botulinum toxin when indicated.

The Consultation: Where Everything Begins

The consultation is the most important moment of the entire process. I dedicate time to understand not only your anatomy but also your desires, expectations, and concerns. I examine each structure of your face and neck, identify the specific signs of ageing you present, and explain exactly what I can improve.

What I Evaluate During the Consultation

  • Skin Quality and Elasticity: very thin or sun-damaged skin requires specific care.
  • Degree of Sagging: determines the extent of the necessary treatment.
  • Bone Structure: jaw, cheekbone, and chin directly influence the result.
  • Position of the Hyoid Bone: essential for planning neck treatment.
  • Amount and Distribution of Facial Fat: some areas need volume, others need removal.
  • Asymmetries: every face has natural asymmetries that need to be considered.
  • Neck Musculature: platysmal bands, digastric muscles, submandibular glands.

Pre-Operative Tests

I order the following tests before surgery:

  • Complete Blood Count
  • PT/INR + aPTT
  • Creatinine and BUN
  • Fasting Blood Glucose
  • Total Protein and Fractions
  • Urinalysis
  • EKG
  • Pre-operative Cardiac Clearance

Medications to Discontinue

Two weeks before and two weeks after surgery, you should discontinue:

  • Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) and other blood thinners
  • NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, etc.)
  • High-dose vitamin E
  • Ginkgo biloba and other herbal supplements
  • High-dose omega-3 fish oil
  • Arnica

Smoking must be stopped for the same period. Nicotine compromises blood circulation to the skin flaps and significantly increases the risk of complications.

The Surgery Step by Step

The surgery lasts between five and six hours, depending on any additional procedures. It is performed under general anaesthesia in a fully equipped operating theatre.

Fat Harvest and Preparation

I start with liposuction of the donor area, usually the inner thighs or lower abdomen. The harvested fat is processed immediately: washed to remove blood and anaesthetic, centrifuged to separate the oil and concentrate viable cells, and divided into the three sizes I described earlier.

Blepharoplasty

Right at the beginning of the surgery, after harvesting the fat, the eyelids are still free of swelling. This allows blepharoplasty to be performed in a predictable and safe manner.

Fat Grafting

With the structure repositioned, I apply the fat to the areas that need volume: temples, cheekbones, nasolabial folds, marionette lines, and jawline. The nanofat is distributed superficially across the entire face to stimulate skin regeneration.

Treatment of the Neck

Through the submental incision, I access the deep structures of the neck. I remove subplatysmal fat, treat the digastric muscles when necessary, and bring the platysma bands closer together at the midline. The lateral dissection connects with the facial dissection, allowing for the elevation of the platysma in continuity with the SMAS.

Deep Plane Dissection

The incisions follow the lines I described: temporal within the hair, pre-auricular in the natural fold, contouring the earlobe and post-auricular. The dissection begins superficially and deepens to the level of the SMAS, entering the deep plane over the zygomaticus major muscle.

I sequentially release the zygomatic, masseteric, and mandibular ligaments. This release allows me to mobilise the entire middle third of the face as a block, elevating it vertically and suturing it in its new position. The difference is assessed immediately on the surgical table.

Closure and Haemostatic Mesh

The skin is redraped over the new structure without excessive tension. I only remove the excess, without pulling. I close with absorbable sutures in multiple layers. Finally, I apply the Auersvald haemostatic mesh, which will be removed in forty-eight hours.

Post-Operative: What to Expect

Recovery from the deep plane facelift is often smoother than patients expect, but it still requires planning and careful follow-up. I use the Auersvald haemostatic mesh, which eliminates the need for drains and helps reduce the risk of haematomas. Within forty-eight hours, I remove the mesh at the office with planned discomfort control. In the first week swelling peaks and begins to subside, and most patients are presentable for social activities within two weeks. The definitive facial rejuvenation result emerges between six months and one year; durability varies according to anatomy, skin quality, lifestyle and ageing. I see patients from all over Brazil and internationally at my clinic in Londrina, Paraná, where I offer complete facilities and postoperative follow-up personally conducted by me.

The recovery from the deep plane facelift is more comfortable than most people imagine. Some important points:

First 48 Hours

You will remain with a compressive dressing and the haemostatic mesh. There will be swelling and some discomfort, controlled with prescribed medication and OTC paracetamol. Keep your head elevated and apply cold compresses as directed.

Removal of the Mesh and First Follow-Up

In forty-eight hours, you return to the office. I remove the haemostatic mesh with planned discomfort control, change the dressing, and assess the initial progress. Many patients already notice early contour changes at this moment.

First Week

The swelling peaks around the second to third day and begins to decrease. Some patients may develop bruising (ecchymosis) that can extend to the neck and chest due to gravity. This is normal and resolves spontaneously in ten to fourteen days.

Second Week

Most sutures are removed or have already dissolved. You will be presentable for social activities, although still with some residual swelling. Makeup can be used with care.

First Month

Gradual return to normal activities. Avoid intense exercise, direct sun exposure, and any trauma to the face. Sleep on your back. A soft diet for the first few days, gradually progressing to normal foods.

Two to Six Months

The result continues to refine. The residual swelling continues to subside, the tissues settle, and the scars mature. This is the period when the final result emerges.

Final Result

Between six months and a year, you will see the more mature result. Deep plane facelift results are designed to be long lasting, but ageing continues naturally and individual durability varies.

My Education and Experience

I graduated from the State University of Londrina and had the privilege of being a student of Professor Ivo Pitanguy, the greatest name in Brazilian plastic surgery and one of the most respected in the world. With him, I learned not only surgical techniques but a philosophy of respect for the patient and an incessant pursuit of excellence.

Over more than twenty years of practice, I have performed over eight thousand plastic surgeries. I am a full member of the Brazilian Society of Plastic Surgery (SBCP) and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). I regularly participate in national and international congresses, keeping myself updated with the advances in the speciality.

The deep plane facelift is not a technique that any surgeon can simply decide to perform. It requires specific training, a deep understanding of facial anatomy, and accumulated experience. My transition to exclusively performing deep plane surgery a year ago was the result of years of study, visits to reference centres, and continuous technical improvement.

Why Trust Me

I do not promise unrealistic outcomes. I promise honesty, refined technique, and complete dedication to your result. If during the consultation I determine that you are not a good candidate for the facelift, or that your expectations are not realistic, I will say this clearly. I would rather turn down a surgery than leave a patient unhappy.

The deep plane facelift is the most important surgery I perform. It is my speciality within the speciality, and I treat it with the same seriousness I would expect for any high-complexity facial procedure.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ideal age for a facelift?

The ideal age for a deep plane facelift is defined by facial anatomy, skin quality and degree of sagging rather than by a fixed number. I have patients in their forties who already show clear indications and patients in their sixties with limited sagging. An in-person consultation is the only way to make this assessment responsibly.

Does the result look natural?

A deep plane facelift is planned to look natural by repositioning deeper facial layers with a vertical vector rather than placing excessive tension on the skin. This helps reduce the stretched appearance associated with older techniques, although the final result depends on anatomy, healing and surgical indication.

How long does the result last?

Deep plane facelift results are usually long lasting and are often planned for a 10-15 year horizon, but ageing continues naturally after surgery. Durability varies with skin quality, weight stability, sun exposure, genetics and lifestyle. Some patients consider a second facelift after this period.

Can I have a facelift if I have had aesthetic procedures before?

Previous fillers, botulinum toxin or non-surgical treatments usually do not prevent a deep plane facelift, but they must be mapped during the consultation. I assess product location, tissue behaviour, skin quality and the degree of sagging before deciding whether surgery is appropriate.

What are the risks?

A deep plane facelift has surgical risks that must be discussed before any indication is confirmed. Possible complications include haematoma, infection, nerve injury, wound-healing problems, asymmetry and scars that may be more visible than expected. The Auersvald haemostatic mesh, careful technique, hospital setting and close follow-up are used to reduce risk, not to eliminate it.

When can I return to work?

Return to work after a deep plane facelift depends on the activity and visibility required, but remote or light work often resumes in about 7-10 days when recovery is uncomplicated. Activities requiring public presentation usually need two to three weeks, and intense physical effort is commonly delayed for about one month.

Does the facelift leave visible scars?

Deep plane facelift scars are planned to be discreet by placing incisions within the hairline, in natural ear folds and behind the ear. Scar quality varies with individual healing, skin type, tension, sun exposure and postoperative care, so visibility cannot be guaranteed.

How long does the deep plane facelift surgery take?

The surgery lasts between five and six hours, depending on additional procedures such as blepharoplasty, fat grafting and neck treatment. It is performed under general anaesthesia in a fully equipped operating theatre, with a dedicated anaesthesia team monitoring vital parameters throughout the procedure.

How do I know if I am a candidate for the deep plane facelift?

Candidacy depends on the degree of facial sagging, skin quality, bone structure, and patient expectations. The deep plane is especially recommended for those with moderate to severe sagging in the middle and lower third of the face and neck. The in-person consultation is the only way for this assessment, where I examine each structure of your face and explain exactly what I can improve.

What is the difference between deep plane facelift and traditional SMAS?

The traditional SMAS facelift works at a more superficial level and pulls laterally. The deep plane releases the four facial retention ligaments (zygomatic, masseteric, mandibular, and cervical) and elevates the entire structure vertically, producing a more natural and long-lasting result: 10-15 years versus 5-10 years for SMAS.

What is the Auersvald haemostatic mesh?

The Auersvald haemostatic mesh is a Brazilian technique developed by Drs. André and Luiz Auersvald using transfixing nylon stitches to reduce dead space after facelift surgery. In my protocol, it avoids drains, helps reduce haematoma risk and supports neck contour during early healing. The mesh is removed in about 48 hours at the office.

Is fat grafting mandatory in the facelift?

Fat grafting is not mandatory in every facelift, but it is frequently useful when facial ageing includes volume loss or reduced skin quality. Fat contains adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) and may support collagen activity and skin texture while restoring selected areas of volume. The indication is individual.

Can fat grafting make the face swollen or artificial?

No, when performed with the proper technique. I use fat in three different sizes — millifat for deep volume, microfat for grooves, and nanofat for skin regeneration — applying conservative and precise amounts in each area. The goal is to restore the volume lost with ageing, not to create volume that never existed. The result is natural and balanced.

How do I choose a good surgeon for a Deep Plane facelift?

When choosing a surgeon for a Deep Plane facelift, check formal plastic surgery credentials, RQE or equivalent specialist registration, specific Deep Plane education, experience with facial anatomy and transparent discussion of risks and limits. Membership of societies such as the SBCP and ASPS, use of hospital facilities and clear pre-operative assessment are important trust signals.

Can patients from other states or abroad book a Deep Plane facelift in Londrina?

Patients from other Brazilian states and from abroad can book a Deep Plane facelift in Londrina, beginning with an online or in-person assessment and followed by mandatory in-person evaluation before surgery. Londrina has an airport with direct flights from São Paulo, Curitiba and other capitals, and the team assists with accommodation, logistics and postoperative scheduling.

What should I evaluate when choosing a Deep Plane specialist in Brazil?

The Deep Plane facelift requires specific training and few surgeons in Brazil fully master the technique. Look for a professional with hands-on training in the United States, documented experience, and a transparent approach to results and limitations. Check that they are a full member of the SBCP and of international societies.

Schedule Your Deep Plane Facelift in Brazil via WhatsApp

If you have made it this far, it is because you are seriously considering a facelift in Brazil. The next step is simple: schedule a consultation with me. My team is ready to assist you, answer your questions, and find the best time for your evaluation. International patients considering medical tourism in Brazil for plastic surgery will receive complete assistance with travel planning and accommodation in Londrina.

Also, check out the mini facelift for milder cases, the neck lift for isolated neck rejuvenation, the male facelift, and the revision facelift. Frequently combined procedures include facial fat grafting, blepharoplasty, rhinoplasty, brow lift, lip lift, and botulinum toxin. See information about pricing, pre-surgical preparation, and post-operative recovery.

Are you ready for this new change? Schedule now!


Dr. Walter Zamarian Jr.

Plastic Surgeon in Brazil

Rua Engenheiro Omar Rupp, 186
Londrina - Brazil
ZIP 86015-360
Brazil

YouTube Channel: Dr. Walter Zamarian Jr.

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