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DR. WORLDWIDE GET TO KNOW HIM

Frank Agullo, MD, FACS — known globally as Dr. WorldWide — is a double board-certified plastic surgeon in El Paso, Texas. He is a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and Affiliate Professor at the University of Texas at El Paso. Specializing in preservation-based aesthetic surgery and the Deep Plane Facelift, he has been named a Castle Connolly Top Doctor for thirteen consecutive years and has a global social following of over 3.5 million across Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat. He is the founder of Southwest Plastic Surgery and Plastic Surgery Studios.

Meet Dr.WW

DR. WORLDWIDE GET TO KNOW HIM

Frank Agullo, MD, FACS is the plastic surgeon the world watches. Known globally as Dr. WorldWide, he has built one of the largest followings of any surgeon on the planet (over 3.5 million on Instagram @RealDrWorldWide) by pulling back the curtain on plastic surgery and showing what extraordinary results actually look like. Celebrities, influencers, and patients from across the United States and around the world make the trip to El Paso, Texas, because when you have seen the work up close, there is nowhere else to go. More than 80% of his patients travel from outside El Paso. The practice handles every detail of their journey.

Dr. Agullo is double board-certified, Mayo Clinic fellowship-trained, and a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. But credentials only tell part of the story. What sets him apart is a philosophy built on preservation: enhancing, restoring, and elevating what is already there rather than changing who you are. Not cookie cutter. Every plan is molded around the individual patient's desires, their anatomy, their life.

That philosophy drives every decision in the operating room. His Motiva Preserve breast augmentations deliver results that feel as natural as they look. His deep plane and endoscopic deep plane facelifts turn back time without announcing themselves. His Supercharged BBL has been refined, published, and presented on international stages. And his ability to combine face and body procedures in a single operative session is a capability few surgeons in the world can offer safely at his level.

The same philosophy applies outside the OR. Forget synthetic fillers. Dr. Agullo restores volume with regenerative grafts including Alloclae, Lipoderma, exosomes, and platelet-derived growth factors. Recovery is treated as part of the result: lymphatic massages, scar management, and Elixir MD LED light therapy ensure that what happens after surgery is as intentional as what happens during it.

Castle Connolly Top Doctor for eleven consecutive years. Texas Super Doctors Hall of Fame. Best Plastic Surgeon in El Paso for thirteen consecutive years. Aesthetic Everything Top Plastic Surgeon 2026. Founding Vice President and President of the World Association of Gluteal Surgeons, where he helped write the global safety standards for gluteal surgery.

The results are daily. The standard is uncompromising. The philosophy is simple: #MakeItHappen. #HappyIsBeautiful. #StayBeautiful.

#PlasticSurgeryIsMyPassion

  • American Society of Plastic Surgeons
  • American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
  • The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery
  • Fellow of the American College of Surgeons
  • The International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
  • American Board of Plastic Surgery
  • American Society of Plastic Surgeons
  • American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
  • The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery
  • Fellow of the American College of Surgeons
  • The International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
  • American Board of Plastic Surgery

GLAMOUR SHOTS

Plastic Surgery is a very personal choice and a unique experience for every individual who chooses to undergo a change, be it a discreet or major surgery. The one thing in common for my patients though is that they experience an inner transformation which ultimately shines through as confidence in themselves. Confident is Beautiful!

PHOTO GALLERY

#RealPatientsRealResults

    #HappyIsBeautiful

    BEFORE & AFTER PHOTOS

    #RealPatientsRealResults

      #HappyIsBeautiful

      BEFORE & AFTER PHOTOS

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      The Lower Third Tells the Story: A Surgeon's Read on the Part of the Face Everyone Misses. Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, double board-certified plastic surgeon at Southwest Plastic Surgery in El Paso, Texas.
      The Lower Third Tells the Story: A Surgeon’s Read on the Part of the Face Everyone Misses
      • Posted on: June 17th 2026
      • Category: Facelift

      A surgeon’s editorial on the part of the face nobody points to in the mirror, and how reading the lower third in five minutes across the desk shapes every consultation that follows.

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      The Lower Third Tells the Story: A Surgeon’s Read on the Part of the Face Everyone Misses
      • Posted on: June 17th 2026
      • Category: Facelift

      A UK paper called me on a Friday afternoon last week for a quote on a public figure whose face had been the subject of a thousand “what did she have done” comments online. The reporter wanted a technical read. She had already spoken to a colleague of mine, Dr. Douglas, who had focused on the lower half of the face. She wanted to know whether I agreed.

      I did. Not because I had any inside knowledge of the patient. Because the lower third of that face was the part of the face that had changed, and the change was readable from the photographs.

      Every plastic surgeon has had this exact conversation a thousand times in private, across a desk, with a real patient sitting on the other side of the desk asking about a feature that is not actually the feature that needs the work. The features the patient points to are almost always the upper or middle third. The eyes. The brows. The cheekbones. The features the surgeon wants to talk about are almost always in the lower third. The jawline. The cheek pad. The perioral region. The chin.

      So let me write the long version of why. Not for the celebrity story. For the patient.

      The Three Thirds, and What Lives in the Lower One

      The face divides into three horizontal thirds. Upper, hairline to brow. Middle, brow to base of nose. Lower, base of nose to chin. Each third ages on its own clock. Each third answers to different operations. Each third tells the surgeon something different.

      The lower third holds the jawline border, the jowl, the prejowl sulcus, the labio-mandibular fold, the marionette region, the corner of the mouth, the perioral skin, the chin, the submental fat pad, the platysma, and the cervicomental angle. The cheek pad, anatomically a midface structure, drops down into the lower third as the supporting ligaments lengthen and is therefore best read together with what is happening below it.

      The lower third is the integrator. Almost every change in the upper and middle thirds eventually shows up in the lower third. Volume loss in the midface drops into the marionette region. Skin laxity above the jaw drops into the jowl. Loss of mandibular definition takes the line that the eye reads as “young” and erases it. A small chin makes the whole lower face look heavier than it is.

      The features a patient points to in the mirror are the noise. The lower third is the signal.

      The Five-Minute Read Across the Desk

      When I sit across from a new patient, the read happens in the first five minutes, before the patient has finished telling me what she came in for. The order goes roughly as follows.

      The mandibular border, angle to chin. Clean line, or interrupted by a jowl that has migrated forward and down over the bone.

      The cheek pad position. Sitting high on the zygoma, or slid forward and down into the upper lower third.

      The perioral region. Lip volume, vermilion border, philtrum, upper lip length, dental show in repose, dental show in animation, corner of the mouth, marionette.

      The chin and the cervicomental angle. Projection in profile. Submental fullness or laxity. Platysma. The line between face and neck.

      That read is what shapes the next forty minutes of the consultation. If the patient came in to discuss her cheekbones and the read says the lower face has dropped, we are going to spend the next forty minutes on the lower face, because that is the conversation that produces a plan that matches her actual face.

      The Five Forces That Change the Lower Third

      There are five primary drivers of change in the lower third, and most patients have more than one of them in play.

      Bone resorption. The mandible and the maxilla both lose bone with age. The lower jaw narrows. The chin recedes a few millimeters. The soft tissue above the bone has more space to drift.

      Ligament lengthening. The retaining ligaments that hold the cheek pad to the zygoma and the jowl out of the mandibular border lengthen over decades. The soft tissue slides down the rails.

      Volume loss. Deep fat compartments shrink unevenly. The midface flattens. The nasolabial fold deepens. The corner of the mouth turns down because the structures behind it have lost volume, not because the patient is unhappy.

      Skin laxity. Collagen and elastin both decline. The dermis thins. The skin loses its grip on the underlying structures and starts to read the shape of whatever has moved.

      Weight change and prior treatment. Significant weight loss, especially the rapid loss now common with the GLP-1 medications, can age a lower third by a decade in eighteen months. Years of poorly placed filler can create a lower face that reads heavier than it would have aged on its own. I see both of these often enough now that they deserve their own line in the read.

      The Operation That Addresses the Lower Third Best in 2026

      For most patients with a dropped cheek pad, an early jowl, and a marionette region that has lost its definition, the right operation in 2026 is a deep plane facelift. The deep plane lifts the cheek pad back to the zygoma, repositions the jowl behind the mandibular border, and restores the line that the eye reads as “young.” It does not stretch the skin to do the work. It moves the deeper structures back to where they used to live and lets the skin redrape.

      I trained the deep plane facelift the long way around. Mayo Clinic plastic surgery fellowship, then the Ponytail Academy intermediate course in Pittsburgh and the advanced course in Santa Monica, then years of doing the operation. The “facelift won” debate is over. The debate now is how deep, how wide, on whom, and through which access. The answers depend on the lower third.

      Why Editorial Reads of Public Figures Are Almost Always Wrong

      When a paper or a website asks a surgeon to read a public figure’s face, the answer is usually written in the form of “she had X.” Filler, threads, deep plane, deep neck lift, buccal fat removal, chin implant. The shortcut sells better than the longer answer.

      The longer answer is that the change you are reading on a public figure’s face is almost never one thing. It is almost always a combination of things, layered over years, sometimes with a real operation in there, sometimes without, sometimes with a weight change or a hormonal change or a hair change that contributes more than any procedure on the list. Telling the difference from a press photograph is hard. Telling the difference from across a desk in a consultation room, with the patient’s photographs from a decade earlier and the chance to put hands on the face, is easy.

      That is why I take the call from a reporter when one comes, and that is why I am careful with my answer. The technical read is fair game. The diagnosis of “she had X” is not.

      What I Will Not Do

      I will not chase the cheekbone with filler in a face whose lower third has dropped. That makes the lower face look heavier, not the upper face younger.

      I will not place a filler pillow under a marionette fold that needs the jowl repositioned.

      I will not augment a chin that needs the soft tissue above it moved, not added underneath.

      I will not perform a facelift on a patient whose ligaments are still intact and whose lower face is still well-defined, because that patient does not need one yet.

      The honest consultation starts with the honest read. The honest read starts with the lower third.

      Ready to Talk?

      If a facial procedure is on your mind and you are not sure where the conversation should start, the conversation should start with the lower third. We will read it across the desk, set it next to the rest of your face, and build a plan that matches the face in front of me, not the feature you walked in to ask about.

      For the clinical patient-facing version of this conversation, see The Lower Third Tells the Story: How a Surgeon Reads a Jawline on agulloplasticsurgery.com. For the practice-program version that lays out the surgical and non-surgical continuum at Southwest Plastic Surgery, see The Lower Face Program at Southwest Plastic Surgery.

      Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book online at agulloplasticsurgery.com. #StayBeautiful.

      @RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook.

      What Your Nose Is Telling You After Rhinoplasty: The Drip, the Healing Mucosa, and the One Pattern That Sends You Back to the Operating Room. Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, double board-certified plastic surgeon at Southwest Plastic Surgery in El Paso, Texas.
      What Your Nose Is Telling You After Rhinoplasty: The Drip, the Healing Mucosa, and the One Pattern That Sends You Back to the Operating Room
      • Posted on: June 16th 2026
      • Category: Rhinoplasty

      A clear drip after rhinoplasty is the most common patient question and the most rarely explained. A surgeon’s read on what your nose is actually doing in the first six weeks, and the one pattern that sends you back to the OR.

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      What Your Nose Is Telling You After Rhinoplasty: The Drip, the Healing Mucosa, and the One Pattern That Sends You Back to the Operating Room
      • Posted on: June 16th 2026
      • Category: Rhinoplasty

      A national reporter called me last week about a TikTok. A young woman with a fresh rhinoplasty had filmed herself bending over a bathroom counter and watching a clear stream of fluid run out of her nose, captioning it for her followers as if her surgeon had ruined her face. The reaction in the comments was the kind of internet pile-on that travels in a single afternoon. The reporter wanted a surgeon to put the whole panic into perspective. So I did.

      What got left on the cutting-room floor, as always, was the longer answer. The answer worth writing for a different audience. The clear drip a patient sees in her bathroom mirror two weeks after rhinoplasty is the most common phone call my office takes about that operation. It is also one of the least talked-about parts of the whole experience. So let me write the longer answer here, where the audience does not need it stripped down to forty-five words for a celebrity sidebar.

      The Mucosa Is Half the Operation Nobody Discusses

      When we discuss rhinoplasty at a consultation, we discuss the dorsum, the tip, the radix, the alar base, the columella, the deviated septum, the internal valve, the angles, the projection, the rotation. We discuss whether the operation will be preservation, structural, or hybrid. We discuss whether we are addressing function or aesthetics or both. We do not, as a field, spend nearly enough time discussing the inside of the nose, which is the part the patient actually lives with in the first six weeks.

      The inside of the nose is lined with a single sheet of pink, ciliated, highly vascular mucosa. It is the same tissue that handles a head cold, a cedar bloom, a perfume that gets too close, and the dust on a hotel pillow. In the unoperated state, it produces and clears about a quart of mucus a day, and you have never thought about it because the cilia move that mucus backward into the throat in coordinated waves and you swallow it without ever paying attention.

      A rhinoplasty disturbs the mucosa twice. Once, mechanically, because the operation lives just under it. And again, biochemically, because every surgical wound recruits inflammatory mediators that increase vascular permeability and decrease ciliary beat frequency in patches.

      The result is predictable. The lining swells. It leaks. The conveyor belt slows. And the fluid that the body still produces, but can no longer move backward, runs forward. Out the front. Down the lip. Into the tissue in the patient’s hand.

      That is the drip. It is not a complication. It is biology.

      The Timeline That Settles Most of the Anxiety

      Here is what I tell every rhinoplasty patient before they go home from surgery. The first three days, expect a small amount of pink-tinged drainage. The first two weeks, expect a near-constant clear drip, worse when you bend forward or lie down. Weeks three and four, the drip should be intermittent. Weeks five and six, mostly dry. By month three at the outside, the inside of your nose should feel like the inside of a normal nose again, even though the deeper structural healing of the operation continues for a full year.

      A meaningful minority of patients stretch the dripping phase out longer than six weeks. Allergy sufferers, smokers, people who live in dusty or smoky environments, and patients who had significant pre-existing congestion will tell me the drip lingers into month two or month three. None of that is a complication. It is the mucosa healing on its own clock.

      If a patient is on schedule, the calls I get are reassurance calls. The drip is annoying, the bedroom needs a humidifier, the bedside tissue box needs a backup, and they want me to confirm that what they are seeing is what I described at the consult. The answer is almost always yes, and the conversation ends in two minutes.

      What the Patient Should Be Doing at Home

      The self-care list is short and the priorities are correct.

      Sleep with the head of the bed elevated. Use a wedge, a recliner, or stacked pillows. Gravity is doing as much of the work as the cilia in the first two weeks, and lying flat sends fluid pooling backward into an airway that is not ready to handle it.

      Avoid irritants. Cigarette smoke, vaping, perfume, smoke from a fireplace, dusty workspaces, harsh cleaning solvents. Treat allergens the way you would treat irritants if you have a seasonal flare overlapping the recovery window.

      Layer in a standard non-sedating antihistamine for a couple of weeks if the drip is dominating the day. It is not a prescription. It is a reasonable over-the-counter habit during the wet phase of recovery.

      Hydrate. Humidify the bedroom. Dry indoor air thickens mucus, and thicker mucus moves slower and irritates more.

      Resist the impulse to blow hard. Hard nose-blowing in the first two weeks can pop an internal suture or restart a small bleed. Sniff gently, dab, swallow when you can, and save the deep blow for week three.

      That is the entire home program for ninety percent of rhinoplasty patients. The remaining ten percent will benefit from a saline rinse, a low-dose nasal steroid, or in the rare case an antibiotic, and those calls belong in the follow-up visit, not on a self-prescribed grocery run.

      The Four Red Flags I Want Every Patient to Memorize

      Most calls to my office about post-rhinoplasty drainage are reassurance calls. A small number are not. The pattern recognition is straightforward, and every patient should leave the operating room with these four in mind.

      Bright red bleeding that does not stop with pressure and head elevation. A few drops of pink-tinged drainage in the first three days is expected. A steady stream of frank red blood that fills more than one tissue, or a single large clot, is not. That is a same-day phone call while it is happening.

      Foul-smelling drainage, especially yellow or green. The healthy nasal mucosa is essentially odorless. A bad smell coming from inside the nose is a sign of bacterial activity. Combined with new pain, focal redness, or new swelling, it is enough to bring the patient back to the office that day.

      Fever above 100.4 F, increased pain, redness, or swelling. The body has a clean way of telling you that an infection is taking hold. The number is 100.4. Above that, with any of the above, the patient calls.

      Persistent unilateral clear watery drainage with a headache that worsens when leaning forward. This is the one almost no surgeon includes in the post-op handout because the underlying problem, a cerebrospinal fluid leak, is rare after a cosmetic rhinoplasty. It is not zero. The pattern is specific and worth memorizing. If a patient describes that exact triad on the phone, the answer is not to wait for a scheduled visit. The answer is an urgent evaluation, typically with imaging, the same day. That call earns a faster response than any other.

      Where the Field Has Landed in 2026

      Two trends in modern rhinoplasty are quietly making the drip phase shorter and the recovery cleaner. The first is the broader adoption of preservation-based principles, which leaves more of the native mucoperiosteum and mucoperichondrium intact and reduces the surface area of disturbed lining. The second is more disciplined intraoperative management of the soft tissue envelope and the internal valve, which lowers the inflammatory burden on the mucosa and shortens the ciliary recovery curve.

      Neither of those trends eliminates the drip. They compress it. A well-planned and well-executed rhinoplasty in 2026 is dripping less, healing faster, and looking more natural at one year than the same operation did fifteen years ago, and the recovery handout my patients leave with reflects that.

      How I Talk About It at the Consult

      When a patient sits across from me to discuss a rhinoplasty, we map the operation on the outside and the inside of the nose at the same time. We discuss the planned shape of the bridge and the planned shape of the internal valve. We discuss the recovery in two halves. The visible half, where the bruising fades from purple to yellow to ivory over three weeks, and the invisible half, where the mucosa heals on its own clock and the drip settles over four to six.

      We discuss the four red flags and they go into the patient’s notes app before she leaves the room. We discuss the antihistamine, the humidifier, and the wedge pillow. We discuss the difference between annoying-but-normal and call-me-right-now. And we discuss the fact that almost every question that arises in the first six weeks will land in the annoying-but-normal column.

      That is the conversation that should have happened with the young woman whose TikTok went viral. It is the conversation we have in my office every week. And it is the conversation I would rather have a thousand times in advance than have to repair a panic that bought a brand-new lifelong distrust of plastic surgery.

      Ready to Talk?

      If you are weighing a rhinoplasty, the first conversation is a consultation. We will plan the operation and the recovery at the same time. If you are already recovering from one done elsewhere and the drip is making you nervous, we can see you, look inside the nose, and tell you whether what is happening is on the expected curve or off it.

      For the patient-facing clinical version of this conversation, see Why Your Nose Drips After Rhinoplasty on agulloplasticsurgery.com. For the practice-program version that lays out the in-office recovery support, see Rhinoplasty Recovery at Southwest Plastic Surgery.

      Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book online at agulloplasticsurgery.com. #StayBeautiful.

      @RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook.

      CONTACT

      (915) 590-7900

      1387 George Dieter Dr. Bldg C301
      El Paso, TX 79936
      info@drworldwide.com