will-rhinophyma-come-back-after-treatment
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Will Rhinophyma Come Back After Treatment?
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Rhinophyma is a chronic skin condition that causes progressive thickening and enlargement of the nose. It changes the shape and texture of the skin, producing bumps, redness, and surface irregularity. Many patients seek treatment to restore a smoother and more natural appearance. The most common question afterwards: can rhinophyma come back?
The honest answer: yes, it can recur — though recurrence is not inevitable. The likelihood depends on how well the underlying rosacea is controlled, the completeness of the original treatment, and lifestyle habits during and beyond. With appropriate treatment and good ongoing skin management, many patients enjoy long-lasting results.
This guide covers what rhinophyma is, the realistic treatment options, what determines recurrence risk, and where rhinophyma treatment fits within the broader service at Centre for Surgery’s CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital. See for the full service overview.
What is rhinophyma?
Rhinophyma develops gradually, often as the advanced phymatous stage of rosacea. It involves thickened skin, enlarged sebaceous (oil) glands, and an irregular nasal surface. The condition is far more common in men and tends to appear later in life, usually between the ages of 50 and 70. The nose can appear bulbous, red, and swollen, sometimes with visible pores or surface nodules.
Although rhinophyma has historically been with alcohol use, this link is largely a myth. Alcohol can temporarily worsen redness, but it does not directly cause the tissue changes seen in rhinophyma. The underlying mechanism is chronic inflammation, vascular changes, and gland overgrowth over many years.
What causes rhinophyma to develop?
The precise cause remains uncertain, but several contributing factors are recognised:
These triggers don’t cause rhinophyma on their own, but they can accelerate the vascular that lead to thickened tissue in susceptible patients.
For broader rosacea context see
How is rhinophyma diagnosed?
Diagnosis is usually made through clinical examination. The characteristic thickening, irregular texture, and enlarged pores are typically sufficient to confirm the condition. In advanced or cases, a small biopsy may be performed to exclude other conditions such as skin cancer or granulomatous disease.
Because rhinophyma is associated with rosacea, assessing the extent of underlying vascular inflammation is essential. This helps determine the best treatment plan — combining local treatment of tissue overgrowth with broader rosacea management.
Treatment options
Treatment on severity. Early phymatous changes may slow with of rosacea; once the skin has thickened noticeably, procedural or surgical intervention is needed to restore the nasal contour.
For mild phymatous changes, treatment of the underlying rosacea — through topical or oral medication, plus gentle skincare, protection, and daily SPF — may slow progression. Once tissue is enlarged or nodular, medical therapy alone cannot reverse the changes. may be used to manage the underlying vascular component.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) or Erbium lasers precisely remove excess tissue while sealing small blood vessels. This allows accurate sculpting of the nose and reduces bleeding during the procedure.


Controlled heat is used to vaporise thickened tissue. Effective for reshaping the nose and improving surface texture, often combined with other techniques in the same session.
For more extensive rhinophyma, the surgeon removes substantial amounts of excess tissue with fine instruments, restoring the nasal shape. techniques may be needed if deeper layers are affected.
After or laser treatment, dermabrasion can smooth the surface and blend the treated area with surrounding skin.
Most patients have a combined approach — debulking to restore contour, then laser or dermabrasion to refine the . Each plan is tailored to the severity and the patient’s pattern of disease.
Can rhinophyma recur after treatment?
Yes — recurrence is possible but not inevitable. The likelihood depends on several factors:
When by an experienced surgeon and supported by good post-treatment skincare and rosacea management, the recurrence risk is low. However, because the underlying rosacea tendency persists, patients should remain vigilant about triggers and follow up regularly.
Most patients enjoy long-lasting improvement — many remain free of meaningful recurrence for years, when the condition was treated early and ongoing care is followed. review with a specialist helps catch any subtle early changes before they progress to advanced disease again.
Recurrence cannot always be prevented entirely, but the risk can be substantially reduced through consistent care:
Post-treatment recovery and aftercare
Recovery time varies by procedure. After laser or surgical treatment, the nose typically appears red and slightly swollen for several weeks. Gentle cleansing, ointments, and sun protection are essential during this period. As new skin forms, redness fades and the contour assumes its final shape.
Most patients return to normal daily within 1 to 2 weeks, with full healing and colour blending taking longer. Following aftercare instructions closely supports the best outcome and reduces the risk of complications or uneven texture.
Regular follow-up allows monitoring of healing and detection of any early recurrence. Ongoing management of the underlying rosacea remains a key part of long-term success. For full guidance see .
What we don’t recommend
Frequently asked questions
Relatively uncommon but occurs more often in men with fair skin who have long-standing rosacea. Most common in patients over the age of 50.
Most patients don’t experience pain, but the area may feel tender, warm or uncomfortable if inflammation or secondary infection is present.
Severe cases can cause nasal obstruction due to internal tissue thickening. Surgical reduction not only improves appearance but can also restore proper airflow.
Initial improvement is visible almost immediately, though swelling and redness can take weeks to settle. Final results develop gradually as the skin remodels over months.
A gentle, fragrance-free — non-abrasive cleanser, supportive moisturiser, and daily SPF. Avoid exfoliants and harsh actives until the skin has fully healed.
NHS funding depends on severity and whether the condition affects function such as breathing. Most cosmetic rhinophyma treatment is private. is available.
Pricing varies with severity and the techniques used. Laser-based treatment courses typically start from around £1,500; surgical with combined laser/dermabrasion £2,500–5,000+. Detailed pricing is provided at consultation. For related cost discussion see .
Any meaningful usually develops over months to years rather than weeks. Regular follow-up at 3, 6, and 12 months — then annually — allows any early changes to be picked up and addressed.
Recurrence can be re-treated effectively, particularly if caught early. The same range of treatment options (laser, electrosurgery, surgical debulking, dermabrasion) is available, calibrated to the extent of recurrent disease.
Centre for Surgery is a plastic surgery clinic at 95–97 Baker Street, Marylebone. Our service combines surgical debulking, laser resurfacing, electrosurgery and dermabrasion as appropriate, with ongoing to support control. All performed by GMC-registered consultant plastic surgeons. No GP referral required.
For guides, see , , , and .
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist . Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by consultant surgeons.
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