Pffice worker with a ‘bumpy’ nose from two botched surgeries

Office worker with a ‘bumpy’ nose from two botched surgeries is finally happy after going under the knife again – despite being told her skin could turn black and DIE

  • Stacy would wear hats to hide her ‘lumpy’ nose after two failed rhinoplasties
  • She developed neovascularisation – new blood vessels form in abnormal tissue
  • Celebrity surgeons Dr Terry Dubrow and Dr Paul Nassif warned of the risks
  • Stacy went ahead with the op and finally has the smooth nose she always wanted
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A dental office worker who was left with a ‘bumpy’ nose from two botched surgeries is finally happy after going under the knife again.

Stacy, whose surname is unknown, would wear hats to hide her ‘lumpy bumpy nose’ after failed rhinoplasties caused her to develop neovascularisation.

This occurs when new blood vessels form in abnormal tissue in an attempt to heal an injury in that area.

Despite being warned by her surgeons Dr Terry Dubrow and Dr Paul Nassif – stars of the hit E! reality show Botched – that the procedure was risky and her nose could turn black and die, Stacy, of Phoenix, Arizona, went ahead with the operation. 

Thankfully it was a success and the dental worker, who is believed to be in her early thirties, finally has the smooth nose she has always dreamed of.


Stacy, who was left with a bumpy nose from two botched surgeries, is finally happy with her appearance after going under the knife for a third time despite being a ‘high risk’ case


Stacy had severe neovascularisation – the formation of blood vessels in abnormal tissue – at the tip of her nose after two botched surgeries. After being warned going under the knife again could cause her nose to fall off, Stacy went ahead with it and finally has the nose of her dreams

Before meeting with her surgeons, Stacy admitted she was a ‘high-risk’ case and accepted the pair may not be able to reverse the damage of her previous procedures. 

Stacy first went under the knife at 30, before having a corrective ‘revision rhinoplasty’ at 31. After ‘walking around for a good year’ with her botched nose, she decided enough was enough. 

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After examining her, Dr Nassif concluded her past doctor unskillfully attempted to restructure the tip of Stacy’s nose by cutting it with a scalpel ‘straight up’. He even described it as a ‘big fat conglomerate of scars’.

This caused Stacy, who lives with her husband Donn, to develop neovascularisation, as well as making the side of her left nostril collapse. 

Dr Nassif said that in order to make her nose smoother he had to ‘remove everything, start afresh and build it from the ground up’.


Pictured before the surgery, Stacy would often wear hats when out and about to hide her ‘lumpy bumpy nose’. She admitted the damage may be too severe for surgeons to reverse


Stacy felt her nose was bumpy and drooped at the tip (pictured before the surgery)


After reality-star medics Dr Terry Dubrow and Dr Paul Nassif ‘built her nose from the ground up’, Stacy celebrated her smooth nose and has ditched hats for good

WHAT IS NEOVASCULARISATION? AND WHY IS IT A RISK DURING RHINOPLASTIES?

Neovascularisation occurs when new blood vessels form in abnormal tissue in an attempt to heal an injury to that area.

It helps to supply the damaged area with oxygen and nutrients, as well as removing waste from the injured tissue. 

Neovascularisation can occur after a ‘revision rhinoplasty’ – more commonly known as a corrective nose job – which is often carried out if scar tissue formed between the skin and the cartilage in the first procedure.

Scar tissue can leave the nose looking bumpy and may cause the person who went under the knife to be more unhappy with their appearance than they were to begin with.

Surgically removing scar tissue can sever important blood vessels in the nasal region, resulting in neovascularisation. 

If blood supply to the area becomes compromised during any further surgeries, the wound may not heal properly and could result in tissue death that causes part of the nose to fall off.

Speaking of the risks, Dr Nassif told Stacy on the E! show: ‘Can your skin start turning purple on the table? Yes. The whole tip can turn black and die.’

A clearly panicked Stacy was then reassured by Dr Dubrow that they would stop operating immediately if she showed any signs of tissue death. 

After admitting her ‘mind was spinning’, a tearful Stacy went through with the procedure. Once over, Dr Nassif told her she had passed the high-risk stage.

Speaking of the results of the surgery, Stacy said: ‘My nose was lumpy, bumpy and the tip was drooping. But now, thanks to Dr. Nassif, my nose is smooth, my bump is gone and the tip is raised.’ 

Ready to ‘hang up her hats’, Stacy said she is looking forward to being a proud wife again. 

In the same episode, a woman whose breasts were botched after four failed plastic surgeries also underwent an incredible transformation.

Hope, whose last name is unknown, was devastated when the surgeries left her with her right breast higher than the left and with part of her nipple missing. Thanks to Dr Dubrow and Dr Nassif, the divorcee finally has a symmetrical chest. 

And another woman, who aims to have the largest backside in the world, asked the celebrity medics to fix her sagging breasts. 

Natasha Crown, 24, bragged about how her bodacious bum breaks chairs and beds but wanted her already extremely large breasts made even bigger.


Pictured in recovery, Dr Nassif reassured Stacy she had passed the high-risk stage


Stacy, pictured before the surgery, admitted her ‘head was spinning’ as she tearfully faced the tough decision of whether to risk going under the knife again or accept the nose she had

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