An Invitation to Cambridge’s Human Anatomy Centre
Some rooms cannot be entered by reputation alone. Cambridge’s Human Anatomy Centre is one of them—a quiet, exacting sanctum where surgical theory is permitted no distance from proof, and where the world’s most discerning hands in facial rejuvenation gather only by invitation.
This is The Face Course. And this year, among the faculty summoned to it, was Dr. Samir Ghoraba.
The Face Course Experience
Two days unfolded with the precision of ritual. Each technique was first held in conversation, then in hand—the Deep Plane Face and Neck Lift, Deep Neck Reduction, Blepharoplasty, Browlift, Lip Lift, and facial bone reshaping. Every gesture was studied at the level of living anatomy rather than the polished result. Nothing was theoretical. Nothing was assumed.
Sharing Expertise on the Global Stage
For Dr. Ghoraba, the moment read less as arrival than as recognition long overdue. Across more than a decade, he has elevated the deep plane technique into something nearer architecture than incision—a discipline of structure, restraint, and inevitability.
In Cambridge, he stood among the very surgeons defining that discipline on a global stage: course hosts Dan Saleh and William Townley, joined by an assembly of Europe’s most eminent consultants in facial surgery.
Dr. Ghoraba’s Reflections
“I am delighted to contribute to such a remarkable course among eminent experts from around the world,” he reflected, the satisfaction unmistakable yet understated. “I look forward to the editions still to come.”
What This Means for Facial Surgery in Cairo
The implication outlasts the sentence. Cairo is no longer a city absorbing the language of facial rejuvenation from elsewhere—it has become a city fluent enough to help author it.
The Face Course will return, edition after edition. Dr. Ghoraba’s place at that table increasingly reads not as an invitation extended—but as one expected.




