March 10, 2020 | Carl Wyndham

47 Cutting-Edge Facts About Plastic Surgery


Plastic Surgery has come to be omnipresent in contemporary society, but the idea of changing the way humans look isn't exactly a new idea—people have been experimenting with their bodies throughout history. Here are 47 interesting facts about how plastic surgery came to be—and some of the extreme lengths people have taken it to.


Plastic Surgery Facts

47. For The Love of Hamburgers

Former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi cared about his presentation so much that he underwent plastic surgery throughout his life. In 1995, he was worried that the people of Libya were beginning to see him as an old man, so he had a procedure done to remove fat from his stomach and have it injected into his face. During the surgery, he refused to be completely anesthetized, and had the surgeons pause partway through so that he could eat a hamburger. 

 Plastic Surgery facts PPcorn

46. Follow The Brows

For those who want their eyebrows to be a bit thicker, they can now go to New York to get what is being called the “Cara Package,” and have an eyebrow transplant that's molded to look like, you guessed it, actress Cara Delevingne's famous brows.

Advertisement

45. Men and Women

Women make up over 90% of all plastic surgeries in the United States, with men rounding to about 9%. This is a sharp increased over the past two decades, however, as men have optioned to have plastic surgery 45% more frequently than they did at the start of the century.

 Plastic Surgery facts Healthline

44. Chest Insecurity

Men now account for 40% of all breast reduction surgeries in the United States.

 Plastic Surgery facts New reflections ps

43. Sick of Shaving

Part of the rise in men getting plastic surgery has to do with the trendiness of beards. Many men who cannot grow full beards have opted to have “facial hair implants” in order to join in on the trend of having a full beard in daily life. I can only assume it's largely so they can join the masses of bearded men who complain about how itchy they are.

 Plastic Surgery facts Youtube 

Advertisement

42. Etymological Origins

Plastic surgery didn’t get it's name because people who have gotten it look like they're made from plastic (I guess that's a coincidence). The term is derived from Greek word plastikos, which means to mold or give form to something.

 Plastic Surgery facts Oh Fabuloso

41. Even Before Plastic

The first use of the term plastic surgery was in the year 1837, a full 18 years before plastic was invented.

 Plastic Surgery facts Salisbury health care history

40. First Uses

Initially, plastic surgery was used mainly as a way to reconstruct damaged body parts, rather than as a form of molding one’s cosmetic appearance.

 Plastic Surgery facts The Public Domain Review

Advertisement

39. Not Who You'd Expect

Of all the celebrities in Hollywood who have had plastic surgery, would you guess that Steve Buscemi was one of them? While filming a movie with Vince Vaughn in 2001, the two men got into a bar fight and Buscemi ended up getting stabbed in the face and neck. He was left with some scars from the event, but they have largely been concealed thanks to plastic surgery.

 Plastic Surgery facts The Talks

Factinate

Sign up to our newsletter.

History’s most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily. Making distraction rewarding since 2017.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

38. Modern Approaches

Modern plastic surgery truly began in the 19th century, but its origins lay in part with the 16th-century physician Gaspare Tagliacozzi. Tagliacozzi used skin from the inside of a patient's arm to successfully reconstruct their disfigured nose. The only catch? The skin from the arm needed to stay attached to the arm and the nose for several weeks, so an apparatus was built to keep the patient's arm raised in front of their face. Comfy!

 Plastic Surgery facts The daily beast

37. Sword Fights

Tagliacozzi was a Renaissance doctor, but he wasn’t the only one doing nose jobs. There was considerable interest in rhinoplasty due to the trend of people dueling with rapiers during the 16th century. These thin, sharp swords quickly disposed of many noses during the Renaissance.

 Plastic Surgery facts Deviated-septum

Advertisement

36. Founding Texts

Although Tagliacozzi gets a lot of credit, he didn’t actually invent this method of nasal reconstruction out of thin air. Instead, he referred to an ancient Sanskrit text called the Sushruta Samhita, which is also a foundational text of Ayurvedic medicine.

 Plastic Surgery facts Squitel

35. Barber Surgeons

Plastic surgery during the Renaissance sounds fun, doesn’t it? Well, to top it all off, most procedures took place at a barbershop, as barbers were the most precise knife men of their time. Gimme a fade and a facelift!

 Plastic Surgery facts Inside Hook

34. Elf Ears

Ever dreamed of being Legolas for a day? How about for a lifetime?! Well, lucky for you, there's a plastic surgery procedure called “Elfing” in which the surgeon will give you the ears of an elf by simply cutting of a chunk of your ear cartilage off at the top, then connecting the remaining parts of the lobe in the shape of a point. Then you're ready to hunt some orcs!

 Plastic Surgery facts Images-free

Advertisement

33. The Snorkel is Key

The ancient Sanskrit text we spoke of earlier is the earliest known record of a rhinoplasty, or what we like to call a “nose job” now. These Hindu surgeons would take skin from either the cheek or forehead, stretch it out over a leaf of desired size, then sew it over the nose. Of course, breathing may be a problem, but not to worry, these ancient surgeons had a plan for everything! They'd polish up a couple of wooden tubes and place them into the nostrils during the healing process. Useful and stylish!

 Plastic Surgery facts I-AIM Healthcare

32. Masochistic Romans

Male breast reduction goes all the way back to the Romans, because... well, because of course it does. Records left over from the Roman physician Cornelius Celsus also reveal that around the turn of the millennium it was relatively popular to have work done on your eyes, lips and nose. Another procedure involved men getting circumcision reversed. Why anyone would want a surgeon to go back down there is beyond me, but I'm not an Ancient Roman.

 Plastic Surgery facts Classical Studies

31. Poker Face

Ever wonder how Botox, that staple of reality TV, works? Well, it actually paralyzes your facial muscles in order to give the appearance of youthfully smooth skin. But there's also something called “Pokertox” which gives poker players a stiff face for competitive tournaments. Well, I guess if you're good enough you can at least pay for it, and as a plus, no one will be able to tell how sad you are if you lose!

 Plastic Surgery facts Harper

Advertisement

30. Indian Inspiration

Plastic surgery reentered into the European mind after British surgeons returned to the continent inspired from seeing an Indian bricklayer perform an incredible surgery. They watched as the man repaired the nose of another man who had it cut off on the order of the sultan. He also had his hand cut off, but unfortunately, that's a bit harder to repair.

 Plastic Surgery facts Attn

29. Preparing the Dead

Back in Ancient Egypt, the afterlife was a big deal. So big, in fact, that they actually performed plastic surgery procedures on the deceased in order to make them more attractive for their eternal life. Believing that the face a person is buried with will be their face for all eternity, they would mold it to its most attractive form before laying them to rest. I'm sure it's a whole lot easier to perform plastic surgery when you don't need to keep the dang person alive.

 Plastic Surgery facts PSTakeCare

28. War Time Trends

War has always been fashionable, yet plastic surgery was not for a long period of time. During the Middle Ages, it was considered a sin for a surgeon to open up the body of another human, as the human body was thought to be God’s perfect creation. As previously stated, however, war was always fashionable, and it took the realization that surgery could fix a person’s wartime wounds for experimentations in surgery to resurface.

 Plastic Surgery facts Factorialist

Advertisement

27. Social Media Effects

Social media is a tool which can be wielded for many purposes and there are many consequences of its role in modern lives. One such consequence is an increase in plastic surgery, as many people are going under the knife, whether it's to become more attractive or to emulate a certain look. In studies, many people have explicitly admitted to getting plastic surgery just to look better in selfies. 

 Plastic Surgery facts Hook, Line & Sinker PR

26. Relationship With Mental Illness

Social media is certainly not helping the 2% of the population suffering from body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). This disorder can take over a person's life as they obsess over a perceived flaw in their bodies that is in reality very minor or, in some cases, not even real. It's estimated that up to 15% of people who suffer from BDD seek out plastic surgery, though they are often denied by proper surgeons who can recognize that they should first seek out help from a mental health professional before altering their physical appearance.

 Plastic Surgery facts HubPages

25. Western Influence

It has been quite common for years for Asian women to alter their appearance to look more Western. The most popular procedure to achieve this is double-eyelid surgery, in which women have the corners of their eyes rounded and a crease created in their eyelids in order to give the appearance of wider, rounder eyes.

 Plastic Surgery facts Wall Devil

Advertisement

24. Back to the Roots

In recent years, the trend of creating Western features in Asian people has been petering out, and people are now beginning to have surgery to accentuate their ethnic traits in an effort to preserve their ethnicity in an ever-globalizing world.

 Plastic Surgery facts The Human Breed

23. Spoiled Silicone

The 1960s saw the rise of breast implants and their presence in popular culture, but they weren't particularly safe at first. Originally, liquid silicone would be injected directly into women's breasts to augment their size, but this often resulted in tragedy, as infections were common and many women had to have their breasts amputated.

 Plastic Surgery facts Power plastic surgery

22. Silicone Uses

The original use of the liquid silicone was by the Japanese during the First World War. They used it to fill out the withered legs of polio victims.

 Plastic Surgery facts Chemethai

Advertisement

21. Nazi Aesthetic

Nazi soldiers didn’t just have to be real German citizens who fit the part, they also had to look the part. In order to make some soldiers who didn’t meet the desired standards look like “real” soldiers, they were forced to undergo plastic surgery.

 Plastic Surgery facts History

20. Fascist Homogeneity

Fascist Italy also employed appearance standards on their military soldiers, as Benito Mussolini put in place the practice of correcting many soldiers' facial structure, including straightening eyelids that were perceived to droop too much. I sure hope Jughead wasn't a member of the Italian Army around this time!

 Plastic Surgery facts USHMM Collections

19. Addiction

Over five million Americans suffer from plastic surgery addiction, and about two-thirds of all patients are those who have had procedures done before.

 Plastic Surgery facts Medium

Advertisement

18. Image of Beauty

Marilyn Monroe is still one of the world’s biggest stars, and many people look to her as a natural beauty from an era before society became so obsessed with physical perfection. It's a great story, but unfortunately, it's not quite the truth: Not only was Monroe naturally a brunette, but she herself had work done on her nose and chin.

 Plastic Surgery facts Scmp

17. Have Plastic Surgery, Will Travel

Many people are now engaging themselves in “lipotourism,” in which they travel to other countries in order to have cheaper plastic surgery done. Inherently, this is a risky idea, and some people have been left life-threatening infections as the medical standards in the countries they travel to are often rather lax—hence the cheaper surgeries.

 Plastic Surgery facts The Cheat Sheet

16. Bigger Butts

The newest plastic surgery trend is butt implants. This fast-growing trend is due to a simple reason: people like big butts, and they cannot lie. Also, Kim Kardashian.

 Plastic Surgery facts Women

Advertisement

15. Fatty Implants

Butt implants may be the hottest trend, but breast augmentation is still the queen of all plastic surgeries. The first successful breast implant took place in Heidelberg, Germany in 1893, performed by the famous surgeon Vincenz Czerny. The patient needed to have a growth removed from one of their breasts, but fortunately they also had a fatty growth on their back called a "lipoma," so Czerny collected it from her back and implanted it in her breast.

 Plastic Surgery facts The Volunteer

14. First Lady Looks

After Donald Trump came into office as President of the United States, a mother in Texas underwent eight different plastic surgeries in order to look like Melania Trump and become, quote: “the First Lady that I know I am inside.” To her credit, she says her image problems began after she was recovering from the radiation therapy she needed while fighting breast cancer. She survived the disease, but felt severely insecure. This came to a head when she was on a date, and the man she was with asked her how old she was, made her show him her driver's license, and told her she looked a lot older than she was. Were you judging her when you read the first part of this fact? Are you still? Didn't think so. 

 Plastic Surgery facts Los Angeles Times

13. Cement Face

One woman thought it was a good idea to have not just her face, but her body injected with... cement. Do I need to tell you that this left her permanently disfigured? 

 Plastic Surgery facts Scribol

Advertisement

12. National Obsession

The United States is a nation obsessed with plastic surgery, and over 14.6 million procedures are done in the country annually, accounting for around 20% of all plastic surgeries done world-wide. 

 Plastic Surgery facts USA Today

11. Doggy Trial

The first breast augmentation done with proper silicone was performed in the early 1960s by surgeon Frank Gerow on... a dog. He conceived of the idea while working as a junior resident surgeon in Houston—after squeezing a blood bag he realized, in a way that isn't creepy at all, that it felt quite similar to a woman’s breast. He tested out his idea on a dog to see if it was viable, and thankfully to dogs and humans everywhere, he removed the implants from the poor pooch shortly afterward.

 Plastic Surgery facts White Pages

10. The Beginning of an Era

The first breast implant with silicone performed on a human was done on Timmie Jean Lindsey, who volunteered for the procedure with Gerow after she originally came in on a consultation for the removal of a tattoo. To this day, she has the implants inside of her. No word on if she ever got that tattoo removed.

 Plastic Surgery facts USA Today

Advertisement

9. Instant Boobs

Today, if a woman desires a temporary 24-hour breast increase, they can opt to have “InstaBreasts.” This is the process of having a saline solution injected into the breasts, which takes just 15-20 minutes and results in larger breasts that last for the whole day before the body finally absorbs the solution and urinates it out.

 Plastic Surgery facts Baby Gaga

8. Experimental Ways

Before silicone was settled upon, many different materials were experimented with, including sponges soaked in alcohol, paraffin, and even beeswax. Whoever thought that beeswax feels anything like a breast should probably have their medical license checked out.

 Plastic Surgery facts Spindle, Shuttle, and Needle

7. Father of Plastic Surgery

World War I brought about a new challenge for modern doctors, as they had an incredible amount of disfigured soldiers that needed urgent care. This horrible opportunity brought about new advances in plastic surgery, and the prolific Harold Gillies emerged as the father of the field. Between the years 1917 and 1925, Gillies and his team performed over 11,000 procedures on more than 8,000 soldiers, including revolutionary muscle and skin grafts.

 Plastic Surgery facts Business Insider

Advertisement

6. Community Opposition

The eight years of near-constant activity in reconstructive surgeries for Gillies from 1917 and 1925 led to rapid advancement in the field, yet it wasn’t until 1931 that its practitioners were accepted by the greater medical community when the American Society of Plastic Surgeons was created.

 Plastic Surgery facts She Knows

5. Chinese Pets

Don’t go to China to get your new dog. It's known that some markets resort to plastic surgery techniques in order to make serious money. Vendors will take sick dogs, put them under the knife to make them like like popular, expensive breeds, pump them full of drugs to maintain an appearance of health for a short period of time, and then sell them for a pretty penny. Tragically, these dogs often don't receive the care they need, which coupled with the shoddy surgeries being performed on them, often means they die soon after they're purchased.

 Plastic Surgery facts Eventbrite

4. Per Capita Leaders

The United States might have the most amount of people going under the knife, but there are two countries who beat them in terms of plastic surgeries per capita: South Korea and Columbia. South Korea leads the world in this regard, and cosmetic surgery is a popular high school graduation present for many young girls.

 Plastic Surgery facts OIS Services

Advertisement

173. Plastic Surgery Gone Wrong

A Korean woman named Hang Mioku became addicted to plastic surgery in an attempt to bolster her career. After a large number of surgeries, she decided to take it upon herself and injected her face with cooking oil. That's right, cooking oil. This self-procedure left her face disfigured for life, and eventually, she went on television to ask her donations to help her undergo corrective surgery. The surgery was a success, as surgeons were able to remove 60g of oil from her face, though she was still left completely unrecognizable.

 Plastic Surgery facts Stirile ProTV

2. Pig Skin

As physicians during the Renaissance were trying out different methods of plastic surgery, finding skin donors was a vital process. The demand for skin led to some physicians trying to use the skin of pigs in their work. Needless to say, that wasn’t the best idea, and the skin would naturally dry up, shrink, and fall off. At first, the physicians were confused about this process, so they simply concluded that flesh is “sympathetic” and would die once the pig that it came from died. Not quite, but hey, they were trying weren't they?

 Plastic Surgery facts Colourella

 1. Not Just For Humans

All over the world, many pet owners have actually decided to have their pets go under the knife in order to give them new testicles—known as “neuticles.” The creator of Neuticles, Gregg Miller, came up with the idea of manufacturing prosthetic testicles for neutered animals after he felt that his recently gelded dog was suffering from a sort of depression, and the first successful implant of neuticles was in 1995. Ten years later he won the satirical Ig Nobel Prize in Medicine for his invention.

 Plastic Surgery facts Pets web md

Sources1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 910


More from Factinate

Featured Article

My mom never told me how her best friend died. Years later, I was using her phone when I made an utterly chilling discovery.

Dark Family Secrets

Dark Family Secrets Exposed

Nothing stays hidden forever—and these dark family secrets are proof that when the truth comes out, it can range from devastating to utterly chilling.
April 8, 2020 Samantha Henman

Featured Article

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.

Madame de Pompadour Facts

Entrancing Facts About Madame de Pompadour, France's Most Powerful Mistress

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.
December 7, 2018 Kyle Climans

More from Factinate

Featured Article

I tried to get my ex-wife served with divorce papers. I knew that she was going to take it badly, but I had no idea about the insane lengths she would go to just to get revenge and mess with my life.

These People Got Genius Revenges

When someone really pushes our buttons, we'd like to think that we'd hold our head high and turn the other cheek, but revenge is so, so sweet.
April 22, 2020 Scott Mazza

Featured Article

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but few people know her even darker history.

Catherine of Aragon Facts

Tragic Facts About Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s First Wife

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but very few people know her even darker history.
June 7, 2018 Christine Tran



Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.