Elatus labialis wingeulus, also known as Winge's Peak, a human,
mid-upper-lip, genetically-dominant physical trait first
elucidated by Los Angeles Dentist Ralph Winge, D.D.S. in
2011, is an 'appendage' over and of the upper lip's middle
tubercle frontal surface, and is a naturally-occurring,
variably-manifested, vertically-oriented, differentiated soft
tissue, epithelial-emanating fold or ridge or line or
prominence, or otherwise, with subepithelial components
(Winge's Peak Connective Tissue Complex, which
includes the Hybrid Jaimalah Fibers), which coincides with
the midline of the face and the interincisal and mid-sagittal
lines, and runs down the middle of the middle tubercle
surface of the rostral upper lip, which may extend inferiorly
from the middle of the Vermillion Border's Cupid's Bow,
down to the lower edge of the lip, with or without
significant elevation above the surrounding lateral labial
tissues, with or without the presence of differentiated
vermillion surface epithelium (Winge Epithelium) seen
along the linear crest of the Peak, with or without a change
in hue from the prevailing local epithelial coloration, and
with or without the presence of an inferiorly-positioned
procheilon.