Overview
Chin augmentation addresses microgenia — deficient chin projection relative to the overall facial skeleton — through either alloplastic implant placement or osseous genioplasty. It is one of the most impactful single-procedure improvements to the lower facial profile, producing significant improvement in the cervicomental angle, neck-jawline definition, and lip-chin relationship with a relatively short and straightforward recovery.
The chin is the anterior projection point of the lower facial skeleton, and its relationship to the mid-face, nose, and neck determines much of the overall aesthetic balance of the facial profile. In patients with a retruded chin, rhinoplasty results may appear disproportionately large; neck definition is compromised regardless of the quality of the neck soft tissue; and the lower face appears weak relative to the upper and middle thirds. Correcting the skeletal foundation addresses all of these proportional issues simultaneously.
The Anatomy: Proportional Analysis
Chin position is assessed through multiple cephalometric measurements. In the lateral profile, the Gonzalez-Ulloa line — a vertical drawn through the subnasale (base of the nose) — should intersect or be within 2–4 mm posterior to the chin pogonion. The facial thirds analysis divides the face vertically into upper (hairline to glabella), middle (glabella to subnasale), and lower (subnasale to menton) thirds — the lower third should be equal in height to the other thirds. Chin projection is also analysed in relation to the lips: the lower lip should project slightly anterior to the upper lip and posterior to the chin in the ideal Riedel plane.
Microgenia (deficient projection) is distinguished from retrognathia (full mandibular retrusion) — a critically important distinction. True retrognathia with dental malocclusion requires orthognathic surgery. Isolated chin deficiency with a normal dental occlusion is the appropriate indication for chin augmentation alone.
Implant Augmentation vs Sliding Genioplasty
Alloplastic Implant Augmentation
Silicone or porous polyethylene (Medpor) implants in anatomically shaped designs are placed in a subperiosteal pocket over the chin symphysis through a small intraoral incision (hidden on the inner lip) or a 1.5–2 cm submental incision. Implants primarily augment horizontal projection and, in extended designs, the lower mandibular border. Recovery is shorter than genioplasty, the procedure is reversible (implant can be removed or exchanged), and the technical demands are lower. The primary long-term risk is progressive bone resorption beneath the implant — typically a few millimetres over 10–20 years, not clinically significant in most patients.
Sliding Genioplasty (Osseous Genioplasty)
The symphyseal bone is osteotomised horizontally below the mental nerve foramina and the mobilised segment is repositioned in any three-dimensional vector — anteriorly (for projection), posteriorly (for reduction), superiorly (for chin height reduction), inferiorly (for height increase), or in asymmetric vectors. The segment is fixed with titanium miniplates. Sliding genioplasty is more versatile than implant augmentation (vertical changes are not achievable with standard implants), produces no foreign body reaction, and does not produce bone resorption. It requires general anaesthesia and has a longer recovery. It is the preferred technique for corrections requiring vertical change, for very large projection requirements, or in patients who are poor implant candidates.
Ideal Candidate Profile
- Chin projection deficit of 4–15+ mm on lateral cephalometric analysis
- Normal dental occlusion (Class I) — abnormal occlusion requires orthodontic/orthognathic evaluation
- Dissatisfaction with lower facial profile or cervicomental definition
- Concurrent neck or facelift surgery (chin augmentation significantly enhances the result of neck lift surgery by improving the skeletal projection over which the neck soft tissue drapes)
- Post-rhinoplasty balance concern (rhinoplasty outcomes are proportionally dependent on chin position)
Recovery Timeline
- Days 1–3: Chin and lower lip oedema and bruising. Eating soft foods. Lower lip numbness from mental nerve traction — expected and temporary.
- Days 7–10: Suture removal (submental approach). Bruising substantially reduced. Swelling improving but chin still appears "full."
- Weeks 2–4: Social presentability. Numbness resolving progressively in most patients.
- Months 2–6: Full result visible. Sliding genioplasty patients have osteotomy sites consolidating — strenuous facial activity should be limited until radiographic healing confirmed at 3 months.
Cost in the United States
Implant augmentation: $4,000–$7,000 (surgeon, anaesthesia, facility). Sliding genioplasty: $6,000–$9,000 (higher due to general anaesthesia requirement and operative complexity). When performed in combination with rhinoplasty, facelift, or neck surgery, incremental cost is typically lower due to shared setup.
Risks and Contraindications
- Implant malposition: Superior or asymmetric migration of the implant in the immediate post-operative period before fibrous fixation. Prevented by meticulous pocket dissection and fixation sutures or screws.
- Bone resorption: Pressure-induced resorption beneath the footprint of a silicone implant — typically 1–4 mm over 10–20 years. Clinically significant only in large-footprint implants or prolonged implantation.
- Infection: Intraoral approach carries higher bacterial contamination risk than submental approach. Requires thorough pre-operative oral hygiene protocol and perioperative antibiotics.
- Mental nerve paresis: Temporary numbness of the lower lip and chin from nerve traction. Permanent injury is rare with correct technique.
- Implant palpability: In thin-skinned patients with minimal subcutaneous tissue, implant edges may be palpable. Proper subperiosteal pocket placement minimises this.
Frequently Asked Questions
Implant vs sliding genioplasty — which is better?
For horizontal projection corrections of 4–12 mm without a vertical component, both produce excellent results; implants offer shorter recovery and reversibility. For large corrections, vertical changes, or asymmetric corrections, sliding genioplasty is more versatile. Patients with chin implant concerns (foreign body preference, prior implant problems) are better served by genioplasty. The decision should be made with a surgeon experienced in both techniques.
Does chin augmentation help with neck definition?
Yes — significantly. The chin skeletal projection determines the architectural framework over which the neck soft tissue drapes. In patients with a retruded chin, even a well-executed neck lift produces a less-defined cervicomental angle because the skeletal foundation is insufficient. Adding chin projection as part of a combined neck/facial procedure substantially improves the cervicomental angle and jawline profile.
Can chin augmentation be done under local anaesthesia?
Implant augmentation is routinely performed under local anaesthesia with oral sedation in an office setting. Sliding genioplasty requires general anaesthesia due to the nature of the osteotomy and the level of patient cooperation required during the procedure.
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