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Nasal Valve Repair

Nasal obstruction is not always “a deviated septum.” The nasal valve region is the narrowest part of the airway and a common cause of persistent breathing difficulty.

Nasal valve repair is structural surgery designed to restore support and improve airflow, often in combination with septal work when indicated.

The aim is controlled refinement: better breathing with a stable nasal structure that still looks natural.

If you are considering nasal valve repair, an in-person assessment is the safest way to diagnose the obstruction mechanism and define a function-first plan with realistic expectations.

What is Nasal Valve Repair?

Most patients with chronic nasal obstruction are told they have a deviated septum. That diagnosis is often correct — but it is not always sufficient. Because chronic nasal blockage may not be the product of a single structural issue. And at this point, one of the most commonly overlooked mechanisms is structural insufficiency in the nasal valve region.

The nasal valve is the narrowest cross-section of the nasal airway. The internal nasal valve is defined by the angle between the upper lateral cartilages and the septum; the external nasal valve refers to the structure formed by the alar rim and the lower lateral cartilages. Narrowing in these regions can be static — meaning an anatomically narrow configuration exists at rest — or dynamic: the nasal sidewall collapses inward during inhalation and the airway temporarily closes. These two mechanisms require different surgical approaches. Therefore, “nasal valve repair” is not a single technique — it is a surgical strategy shaped by the specific structural support problem.

Why does this distinction matter so much? Because septoplasty alone corrects the septum — but it does not resolve collapse or narrowing in the valve region. Turbinate hypertrophy is a separate mechanism. Allergic or inflammatory congestion is not a structural problem and will not improve with surgery. So the evaluation begins with identifying the true source of obstruction: is it the septum, the turbinates, the valve region, or a combination? Planning surgery without answering this question means treating the wrong mechanism.

The core principle of nasal valve repair is support, not widening. A common misconception is that breathing improves when the nose is simply “made bigger.” In reality, healthy nasal airflow depends on a stable skeletal framework, predictable sidewall behavior during breathing, and preservation of mucosal function. The goal of valve repair is to provide structural reinforcement to the collapsing or weakened region. This support is most often achieved with cartilage grafts — septal cartilage is preferred, but particularly in revision cases, septal cartilage may be limited and alternative sources may need to be considered.

The technique used varies depending on whether the internal or external valve is affected, whether the collapse is static or dynamic, and the quality of available tissue. Spreader grafts, alar batten grafts, flare sutures, or lateral crural repositioning may be applied alone or in combination. In every case, the plan is shaped by anatomy — there is no standard prescription.

There is an important boundary I need to state clearly: nasal valve repair is not a cosmetic procedure. The primary goal is function. However, structural support changes can subtly affect external appearance, particularly in patients with thin skin or those who have undergone prior rhinoplasty. Guaranteeing “zero aesthetic change” is not realistic — this possibility should be discussed before surgery.

I avoid giving fixed timelines for the recovery process. Edema, mucosal swelling, and scar tissue remodeling can temporarily affect the airway. The quality of breathing felt in the early period does not reflect the final result. Individual tissue behavior directly influences the rate of healing, the duration of swelling, and scar formation. True stability is assessed not in weeks or months, but as the tissues settle.

Revision cases form a separate category. Valve problems are common in patients who have previously undergone rhinoplasty or septoplasty — but revision surgery behaves differently from primary surgery. Scar tissue alters planes, blood supply may be less forgiving, and available cartilage may be diminished or already reshaped. For this reason, revision planning must be more conservative, goals narrower, and expectations more realistic. Sometimes the most responsible decision is to stop pursuing “perfect breathing” — because the cost of escalation may exceed the expected benefit.

When is nasal valve repair the right option? When the dominant mechanism of obstruction is structural valve collapse or narrowing, when medical treatment options have been appropriately evaluated, and when the patient’s goal is functional improvement — not a dramatic change in nasal shape. If the complaint is mild, intermittent, or difficult to define, and the scale of surgical intervention is disproportionate to the expected gain, “not intervening for now” or “optimizing medical treatment first” may be the most responsible recommendations.

With the right indication and function-first structural planning, nasal valve repair can meaningfully improve breathing quality and nasal stability. But this improvement depends on accurate diagnosis, realistic expectations, and a surgical strategy tailored to each patient’s anatomy — not a standard promise.

Nasal Valve Repair

Frequently Asked Questions

Examination evaluates airflow, valve narrowing, and dynamic collapse with inspiration. Some tests and maneuvers can suggest valve contribution. Diagnosis often includes assessing septum and turbinates as well.

It can subtly, because structural support changes contour. The primary goal is function, and cosmetic effects are discussed honestly.

No. Septoplasty addresses the septum. Valve repair addresses the narrowest airway region and support structures. They are often combined when both issues exist.

It is not always the right answer when obstruction is primarily inflammatory or allergy-driven without structural collapse. A medical plan may be needed.

Swelling varies and can temporarily affect breathing. I avoid fixed timelines because healing depends on technique and individual tissue behavior.

 

Risks include bleeding, infection, persistent obstruction, asymmetry, and cosmetic contour changes. Structural planning reduces risk.

Valve issues are common after prior surgery. Revision repair is more complex and must be planned conservatively.

Yes, often. A combined plan can address function and aesthetics coherently.

Structural support can be durable, but scarring and tissue remodeling continue for months.

You should expect improved airflow when valve collapse is the true mechanism, not a guarantee that all nasal symptoms disappear.

Do you still struggle to breathe through your nose despite treatments?

A Structured Surgical Journey

From your first evaluation to long-term follow-up, every step is structured to help you make a clear and confident decision.

The process begins with understanding your goals and current anatomy. Standardized photos allow an initial assessment to determine whether surgery is appropriate and which approach may be suitable.

A short online consultation with Dr. Mert Demirel is scheduled following the initial review. We discuss your expectations, possible options, and the limitations of each approach to ensure a clear and realistic understanding before any decision is made.

Based on your evaluation, a personalized surgical plan is created. The proposed approach, scope of the procedure, and clear pricing details are shared with you in a structured and transparent way.

Once you decide to proceed, your visit to Istanbul is carefully organized. Airport transfer, accommodation, and clinical scheduling are arranged, followed by an in-person evaluation and the surgical procedure.

The early recovery period is closely monitored with structured follow-ups.
Before your return, a final check is performed to ensure a safe and stable condition for travel.

The process does not end with the surgery.
Your recovery and results are followed over time, with guidance provided at each stage to support long-term stability.