Converse Nasal Knife — Reconstructive Rhinoplasty Era
John Marquis Converse (1909-1981), chief of plastic surgery at New York University Medical Center from 1955 and editor-in-chief of “Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery” for two decades, defined the modern field of facial reconstructive surgery through his five-volume “Reconstructive Plastic Surgery” (first edition 1964). The Converse nasal knife is the precision blade designed for the reconstructive rhinoplasty cases — post-traumatic nasal deformity, congenital cleft-related nasal asymmetry, post-oncologic nasal reconstruction — that Converse’s NYU institute treated.
Reconstructive versus cosmetic rhinoplasty
Cosmetic rhinoplasty (Joseph, Aufricht tradition) modifies a normal nose; reconstructive rhinoplasty (Converse tradition) rebuilds a damaged nose. The instruments overlap but reconstructive cases demand finer blades because the tissues are scarred, the anatomy is distorted, and the operator has less margin for error than in cosmetic work on virgin tissue. The Converse knife is sized for this scarred-tissue precision.
Converse’s lasting contribution
Converse’s textbook trained two generations of reconstructive plastic surgeons worldwide; his knife is one of several instruments from his series that remain in modern reconstructive rhinoplasty trays.





Reviews
There are no reviews yet.