About Procedure
Before & After
« Ear Pinning
« Surgical Procedures
Most surgeons recommend that parents stay alert to their child’s feelings about protruding ears;
don’t insist on the surgery until your child wants the change. Children who feel uncomfortable about
their ears and want the surgery are generally more cooperative during the process and happier with the outcome.
In the initial meeting, your surgeon will evaluate your child’s condition, or yours if you are
considering surgery for yourself, and recommend the most effective technique. He or she will also give
you specific instructions on how to prepare for surgery.
Ear surgery is usually performed as an outpatient procedure in a hospital, a doctor’s office-based
surgical facility, or a freestanding surgery center. Occasionally, your doctor may recommend that the
procedure be done as an inpatient procedure, in which case you can plan on staying overnight in the hospital.
If your child is young, your surgeon may recommend general anesthesia, so the child will sleep through
the operation. For older children or adults, the surgeon may prefer to use local anesthesia, combined
with a sedative, so you or your child will be awake but relaxed.
Ear surgery usually takes about two to three hours, although complicated procedures may take longer.
The technique will depend on the problem.
With one of the more common techniques, the surgeon makes a small incision in the back of the ear to
expose the ear cartilage. He or she will then sculpt the cartilage and bend it back toward the head.
Non-removable stitches may be used to help maintain the new shape. Occasionally, the surgeon will remove
a larger piece of cartilage to provide a more natural-looking fold when the surgery is complete.
Another technique involves a similar incision in the back of the ear. Skin is removed and stitches are
used to fold the cartilage back on itself to reshape the ear without removing cartilage.
In most cases, ear surgery will leave a faint scar in the back of the ear that will fade with time. Even
when only one ear appears to protrude, surgery is usually performed on both ears for a better balance.
Adults and children are usually up and around within a few hours of surgery, although you may prefer to
stay overnight in the hospital with a child until all the effects of general anesthesia wear off.
The patient’s head will be wrapped in a bulky bandage immediately following surgery to promote the
best molding and healing. The ears may throb or ache a little for a few days, but this can be relieved
by medication.