Gen Z turns to breaking facial bones for beauty: experts warn of permanent harm

By Miles Harper

Videos circulating on TikTok and Instagram show people repeatedly striking their faces with blunt objects hoping to sculpt a sharper jawline — a risky practice clinicians now warn is causing real harm. The trend matters because it’s not harmless theater: medical experts and a recent 2024 paper in the Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery say these stunts can produce fractures, dental damage, and long-term functional problems.

“Social media is normalizing facial trauma,” said oral and maxillofacial surgeon Lee Kojanis of Premier Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery in New Jersey. He and other specialists say the DIY approach behind what some call bonesmashing is built on a fundamental misunderstanding of how bone heals and remodels.

Why blunt-force hits won’t remodel your face

Surgically changing bone structure relies on precise imaging, careful planning, sterile technique, and secure fixation. Randomly hitting your jaw at home provides none of that control. Instead of predictable outcomes, the body can respond with uncontrolled swelling, displaced fractures, and scar tissue that actually worsens facial balance.

Kojanis warns that uncontrolled trauma increases the chance of asymmetric healing — so even if one side seems to change, the overall effect is often uneven and permanent.

Immediate and longer-term dangers

Injury can be swift and severe. Repeated blows risk breaking the jaw, fracturing cheekbones, or damaging the bones around the eye socket. Those injuries can require emergency surgery and carry complications beyond cosmetic concern.

  • Facial fractures — breaks to the mandible, maxilla, zygoma, or orbit that may need surgical repair.
  • Dental trauma — cracked or loosened teeth, root damage, and lost restorations that often require dental surgery or implants.
  • Vision problems — orbital fractures can impinge on the eye or muscles that control movement, risking double vision or vision loss.
  • TMJ dysfunction — injury to the temporomandibular joint can cause chronic pain, limited jaw movement, and bite disorders.
  • Infection and nerve injury — open fractures or dental damage can introduce infection; nerve trauma can produce lasting numbness or altered sensation.

A 2024 analysis in the Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery flagged these self-inflicted trends as urgent public-health concerns, documenting cases where social media-driven behavior led to clinically significant harm.

When to seek medical attention

If someone has been hitting their face, immediate evaluation is important when any of the following occur:

  • Persistent or worsening pain
  • Numbness or tingling in the face
  • Changes in how the teeth meet (bite changes)
  • Swelling, bruising, or visible deformity
  • Vision changes, double vision, or eye pain
  • Loose, broken, or missing teeth

These symptoms can indicate fractures, tooth injury, or nerve involvement that may require imaging (such as X-rays or CT scans) and specialist care.

Safer alternatives and practical advice

If jawline appearance is a concern, board-certified clinicians — such as facial plastic surgeons, oral and maxillofacial surgeons, and licensed dermatologists — can offer evidence-based options ranging from noninvasive treatments to surgical procedures performed under controlled conditions.

Most importantly: stop any self-harmful behavior now. The internet amplifies extremes quickly, but the physical consequences of facial trauma can be long-lasting and, in some cases, irreversible.

Medical professionals recommend consulting a qualified clinician rather than following viral how-to content. If you’re already experiencing symptoms after self-inflicted facial trauma, seek immediate assessment; early diagnosis and treatment improve outcomes and reduce the risk of permanent damage.

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