Cup ear
Goblet ears are a congenital malformation between Zhaofeng ears and microtia, accounting for about 10% of various congenital ear deformities. Bilaterality is more common, but left and right are not necessarily symmetrical, and there is a certain heritability. Cup-shaped ears have four main characteristics: the auricle is curled, the lighter is just the folding of the ear wheel itself, and the heavy one hangs over the entire auricle, covering the ear canal opening. The auricle is tilted forward, which is the ear of the wind, but it is different from the simple ear deformity of the wind. The auricle becomes smaller, mainly because the auricle becomes shorter. The auricle is low in position, more severe, and often accompanied by maxillofacial deformities. Cup-shaped ears are often called curled ears, lop ears, etc., because its shape seems to have worn a rope early on the flange of the flange to tighten it. Therefore, some people call it ring constriction.
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