Facial prosthetic

When used in the theater, film, or television industry, facial prosthetic makeup alters a person's normal face into something extraordinary.

To apply facial prosthetics, Pros-Aide, Beta Bond, medical adhesive, or liquid latex is generally used.

It has been found that archaeologists stumbled upon an artifact that was false inside a skull's left eye socket in Iran that goes way back around 3000–2900 B.C.

The revelation of these findings are the start of the knowledge of the skill of facial prosthetics and in the ancient times focused on the social priority of the face.

In the Vedic period, a well-known disquisition on the Indian treatments named The Sushruta Samhita, had done a report of the nasal pyramid with a cutaneous flap had been taken from the frontal region which shows signs of surgical reconstruction.

The people that had mutilated others had been retaliated by punishment which had restored lost parts which encouraged a few attempts at surgical grafting.

Long bone fracture reductions and restraints were more interesting to Hippocrates, Galen, and Celsus than the treatment in maxillofacial defects.

[2] The Byzantines in the Middle Ages believed that an individual would not be able to have become an emperor if his or her nose was severed (a punishment known as a "rhinokopia").

In 1000, Holy Roman Emperor Otto III visited the tomb of Charlemagne in Aix-la-Chapelle, France.

A tooth of Charlemagne was removed by Otto as a relic and a gold plate became a replacement to a piece of the cadaver's broken nose.

[2] In the 19th century, throughout the time of the Industrial Revolution, appearance was improved a great deal by recently developed materials accessible for facial prostheses.

He had explained that in giving fulfilling skin simulation, the use of translucent ceramics for nasal prosthesis after amputation is the key.