Calcinosis cutis long after rhinoplasty with silicone

Case Rep Dermatol. 2014 Dec 16;6(3):288-90. doi: 10.1159/000370304. eCollection 2014 Sep-Dec.

Abstract

Rhinoplasty is a plastic surgery procedure to reconstruct the nose. Silicone alloplastic materials are most widely used as implants for rhinoplasty, but calcification on the surface occurs with long-term usage. Herein, we report a case of gruel-like calcification approximately 50 years after silicone implant rhinoplasty. In this case, calcification on the silicone surface might have transformed into gruel-like deposits, which presented as a subcutaneous mass at the dorsal area of the nose. The precise mechanism is unclear; a pH change in the tissue might have occurred during the process of inflammation, leading to the dissolution of calcified deposits.

Keywords: Calcinosis cutis; Rhinoplasty; Silicone.

Publication types

  • Case Reports