Women in East Asia are putting tiny pegs into their nostrils so their nose can look more European.

Women in East Asia are putting tiny pegs into their nostrils so their nose can look more European.

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Before (left) and after (right) pictures show a model’s nose apparently becoming pointier after she used the nasal pegs. The image was posted by a seller on Taobao, a Chinese shopping site  Photo: Dailymail


Women in East Asia are putting tiny pegs into their nostrils so their nose can look more European.

The beauty trend started from South Korea about two years ago and has  spread to Japan, mainland China and Taiwan, where women with a pointier European nose are considered more attractive.

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Women in Asia are using the nasal pegs and hook to make their nose look more attractive. The advertisement on Taobao shows models posing for before-and-after pictures with the product  Photo: Dailymail


The non-surgical nose-lifting trend involves a set of tools which are popular on shopping websites in East and South-east Asia.

A typical set consists of two small curved pegs, measuring two to three centimetres long, as well as one adjusting hook.

The most popular brand seems to come from South Korea, but various other copycat products have cropped up and sell for as little as £1. According to the instructions online, users should first insert the two pegs into their nostrils respectively. The pegs are said to be made with silicone.

Then they can use the hook to adjust the pegs so they stand in a 45-degree angle inside the nose.

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A typical set consists of several pegs of different sizes and a hook for adjusting the angle  Photo: Dailymail


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Online instructions say users should first insert the  pegs into their nostrils. Then they should use the hook to adjust the pegs so they stand in a 45-degree angle inside the nose    Photo: Dailymail


One seller on China’s popular shopping site, Taobao, claimed that because the product was invisible, it can be a woman’s secret weapon in getting a beautiful nose without surgery.

An advertisement posted by the seller said the product, said to be ‘anti-bacterial’, could change the shape of a nose in less than 10 seconds and is safe to use. 

However, potential customers are advised not to wear them for more than eight hours.  

Although the nasal pegs are popular among beauty-conscious females, they have also brought health issues to the customers.

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Eurasian actresses with pointier noses are huge popular in Asia. Above are Maggie Q (left), half American and half Vietnamese, and Michelle Reis (right), half Chinese and half Portuguese  Photo: Dailymail


Last November, a 25-year-old woman in Taipei nearly lost her nose after a peg poked through her nasal membrane and caused a bacterial infection. It was reported that the woman wanted to change the shape of her nose tip, but couldn’t afford plastic surgery. 

Dr. Liao Guoliang, who treated the woman, warned against the nasal beauty product. Dr Liao said he noticed more and more female patients had come to the hospital after suffering from nasal diseases and injuries caused by the silicone pegs.

In another report from mainland China last week, a women from Chongqing had to be taken to the hospital after she accidentally inhaled and swallowed the nose shapers. After a medical checkup, doctors found the objects in her stomach which were later eliminated from her body two days later.

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Angelababy (left), who is a quarter German, and Cecilia Cheung (right), who is a quarter English, are also considered to have the perfect features by people in East Asia  Photo: Dailymail


After a medical checkup, doctors found the  object in her stomach and it was eliminated from her body two days later.

The woman, surnamed Zeng, told a reporter from Chongqing Broadcasting Group that she had bought the product online, and that many other customers had suffered from similar problems judging from the comments left on the online shop.

Dr Zhou Xin, an ear-nose-throat specialist, called the beauty trend ‘life-threatening’. Dr Zhou said in the same report that the tiny objects could block a person’s respiratory tract, causing difficulties in breathing and even posing danger to life. Dr Zhou suggested women not use the nasal pegs.

Source: Dailymail


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