Brow archetype preferred by Korean women.

J Craniofac Surg

From the *Dr Kim's Aesthetic Surgical Plastic Clinic, Seoul, Korea; †Department of Plastic Surgery, Inha University School of Medicine, Incheon, Korea; ‡Inha University School of Medicine, Incheon, Korea; §Peninsula Medical School, Exeter, UK; and ¶Inha Research Institute for Medical Science, Incheon, Korea.

Published: July 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the preferred brow archetypes among Korean women, surveying 300 participants grouped by their backgrounds (medical students, recent plastic surgery clients, and brow bar visitors).
  • Results indicated that 77.3% of respondents believed there is an ideal brow method, with the Anastasia archetype being the most preferred across all groups (44.8% overall).
  • Significant differences in preferences were found among the groups, influenced by occupation, but no significant variation was observed based on age, education level, or marital status.

Article Abstract

The aim of this study is to see which brow archetype is preferred by Korean women. The archetypes were chosen from a literature search, which contain detailed, replicable methods and have diagrams (Westmore, Lamas, Anastasia, Schreiber, and Hwang). A survey was conducted on 300 subjects (group A, 100 female medical students; group B, 100 women who had visited a plastic surgery clinic for periorbital rejuvenation; and group C, 100 women who visited the brow bar). They were asked whether they think there might be a method that yields an ideal brow archetype. In the cases where they said yes, they were asked to choose 1 of the illustrated 5 brow archetypes that they think is ideal. Among the 300 respondents, 232 (77.3%) thought there might be a method to yield an ideal brow archetype, whereas 68 (22.7%) answered they did not. The preference for the brow archetypes was different among the 5 archetypes (P = 0.0001, χ2). Anastasia was the most preferred (44.8%, brow starts on a perpendicular line drawn from the middle of the nostril, arches on a line drawn from the center of the nose through the center of the pupil, and ends on a line drawn from the edge of the corresponding nasal ala through the outer edge of the eye). Anastasia was followed by Lamas (22.0%). In group A, Anastasia (55.7%) was the most preferred, followed by Lamas (26.2%) and Westmore (13.1%). In group B, Anastasia (34.8%) was the most preferred, followed by Lamas (30.3%) and Westmore and Schreiber (both 13.5%). In group C, Anastasia (47.6%) was the most preferred, followed by Hwang (25.5%) and Westmore (11.0%). There was a significant difference (P < 0.001) among the 3 groups. There was a significant correlation between the preference of brow archetype and occupation (P = 0.0033). However, no significant differences were noted for the preference of brow archetype between the age groups of younger than 30 years and older than 30 years (P = 0.1374), level of education (P = 0.3403), marital status (P = 0.541), or monthly income (P = 0.1696, χ2). The result of this study might be useful in facial rejuvenation surgeries as well as in brow esthetics or tattooing of eyebrows.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SCS.0000000000000844DOI Listing

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