Abstract

Growth and alterations in craniofacial morphology have attracted interest in many fields of science, especially physical anthropology, genetics and forensic sciences. We performed an analysis of craniofacial morphology alterations by gender and ageing stage in Korean populations. We studied 15 facial metrics using two large Korean populations (1,926 samples from the Korea Medicine Data Center cohort and 5,643 samples from the Ansan-Ansung cohort). Among the 15 metrics, 12 showed gender differences and tended to change with age. In both of the independent populations, brow ridge height, upper lip height, nasal tip height, and profile nasal length tended to increase with age, whereas outer canthal width, right palpebral fissure height, left palpebral fissure height, right upper lip thickness, left upper lip thickness, nasal tip protrusion, facial base width, and lower facial width tended to decrease. In conclusion, our findings suggest that ageing (past 40 years of age) might affect eye size, nose length, upper lip thickness, and facial width, possibly due to loss of elasticity in the face. Therefore, these facial metric changes could be applied to individual age prediction and aesthetic facial care.

Highlights

  • The appearance of the face typically changes in different dimensions and directions with age[1,2]

  • We speculated that the ageing-related trends in each facial metric might be important for human evolution and appearance

  • In humans, the ridges arch over each eye, offering mechanical protection[11]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The appearance of the face typically changes in different dimensions and directions with age[1,2]. This phenomenon, known as allometry, is the reason why young faces are distinct from old faces[3]. We performed a two-stage genome-wide association study of facial morphological traits in two large Korean populations (1,926 samples from the Korea Medicine Data Center (KDC) cohort and 5,643 samples from the Ansan-Ansung cohort)[6]. The arches are more prominent in men than in women and vary between different ethnic groups[12]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call