Abstract

The search for beauty and its value has been a discussion topic since the ancient Greeks composed their myths. The advent of safer and more advanced modern plastic surgery techniques and the spread of aesthetic medicine have renewed the search for beauty. Today, beauty seems possible, accessible, and more democratic than ever before [1]. To be beautiful is going to become an imperative, and from this standard, new and more subtle discriminations will arise: natural beauty will become more precious than artificial beauty, so that naturally beautiful bodies are privileged [2]. With regard to clinical practice, one of the most fundamental and interesting questions in aesthetic surgery is whether an objective indication exists for such procedures.

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