Six weeks ago the former daughter -in -law of Carmen Borrego He underwent a very aggressive surgical intervention to correct a maxillary malformation that, beyond an aesthetic issue, began to generate real health problems. The change of image is spectacular, so much that she herself has recognized that she is still in the process of accepting her new face: “The change has been very abrupt, I did not expect it.” This Wednesday, the surgeon who operated it has given all the keys to its transformation and has clarified: “He is still very inflamed, I told him to wait a little before appearing in the media.”
It is called Álvaro Sada and is a surgeon at the La Paz hospital in Madrid, where they have operated Paola after several years of preparation: “It is an surgical orthodontic treatment. We made some cuts in the maxilla, also a cut in jaw. We plan it in software, we get surgical splints, we print in the 3D printer of peace. We fix it with plates and screws,” counted in TAR. “It has been operated because of a medical issue. It is a medical and functional issue, what happens is that the repercussions harmonize the face, but if it was not operated, it could have eating problems, osteoarthritis in the right TM, bad rest … and it will be worse.”
The doctor wanted to respond to some of the comments that have been heard throughout the day, such as that Paola’s Rictus seems paralyzed: “I told him to wait a little more because he is inflamed, but he will smile perfectly. He has an asymmetric smile, as it has to be.” He also ensures that José María Almoguera’s ex will recover her gestures completely in a few months: “Yes, he still does not open his mouth because we have disassembled his face completely, both maxillary, jaw and chin. He will have a normal facial mimicry after rehabilitation.”
A radical change
Paola starred on Wednesday the cover of the magazine Readings, where he explained how this process has lived: “They have had to retouch everything. The surgeon told me that the nose was rare and they have had to touch me too. The nose did not expect it.”
The postoperative period has been (and remains) very hard. Faced with liquids, he has had to learn to speak and eat again and also face the reaction of his most intimate: “My mother cried because I said that this was not me, and my children too.” He assures that children are still getting used to change, just like her: “I am in the process of acceptance, I still do not recognize.”