Celebrity Noses in the Spotlight

Some stars say they needed new noses for medical reasons, but is that true?

ByABC News
February 10, 2009, 9:09 PM

Dec. 10, 2007 — -- When it comes to noses in Hollywood, more and more people are wondering "did she or didn't she?"

We've heard the line time and time again, celebrities caught in a before-and-after photo clearly showing two very different noses. "I had a deviated septum," Ashley Tisdale, star of "High School Musical," recently confessed.

With that, Tisdale joined an elite group of Hollywood A-listers who have admitted to having a nose job to fix a deviated septum, but are their claims justified or is a deviated septum just a convenient excuse for a new nose?

As much as Americans are obsessed with their celebrities, so are they equally intent on pointing out even their most minor imperfections. Celebrities live in front of the camera, so when they decide to go under the knife, even the most subtle changes are instantly recognizable.

Cameron Diaz, Jennifer Aniston and Ashley Simpson have all made headlines in the last year for stepping out with slightly altered noses. And like Tisdale, all three women say their new noses were a medical necessity, not a vanity.

Raj Kanodia, the Beverly Hills plastic surgeon who performed all of their surgeries, says a deviated septum is one of the most common problems he sees in his office.

"I would say in my practice as high as 95 percent of the people I see have a deviated septum, so chances are when someone says they have a deviated septum, they do," said Kanodia. "Most septums and noses are broken when you're a toddler because the upper bone is not developed yet so when a child is learning to walk or crawl and they fall on their face, they traumatize their nose."

The septum, a thin wall inside of the nose that divides the left and right nasal cavities, is deviated when a trauma causes the septum to block one side of the nose and reduces airflow, causing difficulty breathing. A surgery called septoplasty is the best way to remedy a severely deviated septum.

But Kanodia says the procedure to repair the septum takes place almost entirely internally, differing from the more common nose surgery known as rhinoplasty.