Tag Archives: breast lift


Permalink to Breast Augmentation Revisions – Downsizing

Breast Augmentation Revisions – Downsizing

heidi-montag-too-large-breast-implantsIn the last several weeks I have performed a number of breast augmentation revisions surgeries. Breast augmentation revision is usually a combination of implanting smaller breast implants and then performing a breast lift. Interestingly enough, each one of these women were seeing me for the same issue. These were all petite women who had breast augmentation performed by another plastic surgeon. All of these breast augmentation cases were done with large saline breast implants. They were uncomfortable and felt that they looked too big. I agreed with all of them that they did look too big. And I’ve blogged about Heidi Montag and her choice of breast implants before and of course about Sheyla Hershey and the removal of her “world’s largest breast implants.” So before I go on let me recap my objections to large saline implants in small framed women.

1. The breast implants look disproportionate and make the patient look unbalanced.

2. Large implants in small women make them look fat in their clothes and top-heavy.

3. Large saline breast implants create more fitting of the skin and more wrinkling and rippling.

4. Large saline breast implants cause more dissent of the implant overtime and therefore more sagging.

5. Large saline breast implants because of the thinning of the skin feel like a waterbed.

It is true that some of these changes could happen with large silicone breast implants of equivalent size, however, they are more pronounced with saline breast implants.

To solve this issue and create a more balanced look for each of these women, I removed the larger implants replaced them with an appropriate sized silicone breast implant and then designed the breast lift over this new implant. As I’ve written before, you can make preliminary markings before the surgery but the actual proof is in the operating room. With the new breast implants in place, temporary sutures are placed on the outside of the skin without any incisions and the breast is tailor tacked to the appropriate shape. This process may take several tries until we are able to achieve the ideal shape. At that point, the extra skin is removed and the breast is tightened and lifted.

Breast revisions are never an easy operation but they are very satisfying one for both the patient and the doctor. The difference in comfort, aesthetics, and self-image are amazing. Every single patient that I have converted from saline to silicone implants has commented on how much better they feel. The average breast implant should last 20 to 30 years but if you have a result that you are not happy with, there is no reason to wait that long to change it.

Of course, the best option would have been to choose the right size breast implant from the very beginning. This is why I discuss the downside of choosing breast implants that are too large in the first place and then I don’t have to worry about the patient coming back in because they are unhappy with their results!


Permalink to Breast Augmentation Takes Mad Skills

Breast Augmentation Takes Mad Skills

Breast augmentation surgery is beginning to pop up in the strangest places!  This includes your ear/nose/throat doctors, family doctors, general surgeons, emergency room doctors, and… just about everybody else who has an MD after his or her name.  Lots of doctors are trying their hand at the procedure as a way of supplementing their bottom line.  And why not?  Constantly in demand, breast augmentation is the number one cosmetic procedure.

There’s even a $7,000 entry-level course being taught for anyone with an M.D. degree to learn how to perform breast augmentation. At the end of this weekend course, someone with only modest surgical skills could learn how to balloon up the breast tissue as you would for liposuction, and do a very limited pocket under the breast and over the muscle for a large incision in the breast fold and then put an implant in and sew it up.

What does surgical judgment, experience and aesthetic judgment count for?  By the time I had started my cosmetic breast practice, I had performed hundreds of a much more difficult procedure: breast reconstruction. This gave me a great deal of experience with the sub muscular pocket and the beginnings of the concept of the muscle brassiere. In addition, with breast reconstruction, you are usually trying to match and adjust the opposite side.

So is judgment and experience important?  Just this last week, among the other cases cited were breast cases: bilateral and augmentation, unilateral augmentation, and then a mastopexy bilateral Salt removal and replacement bilateral implant removal incised exchange.

Just as an outline of the process of breast augmentation and lift:

  1. Preoperative marking
  2. General anesthesia
  3. Incisions
  4. Making the sub muscular pocket with muscle support
  5. Placement of a sizer to expand the pocket to fit the breast implant
  6. Sit the patient up for visual assessment for shape and volume
  7. Make necessary adjustments to the size
  8. Temporary sutur breast lift
  9. Sit up for assessment
  10. Remove sutures
  11. Second temporary breast lift
  12. Sit patient up for assessment
  13. 3rd Temporary breast lift
  14. Set up okay just markings
  15. Remove skin
  16. Suture closures
  17. Set up for final check of finished lift and augmentation to make sure it is aesthetically correct.

These steps were for a complicated major breast lift and augmentation with asymmetry.  There are many different surgical steps with a lot of decisions to be made at every step. The reason you can’t just throw some markings and then cut on the dotted line is for every change in volume, there are changes in dimension according to the skin tension. This is different according to every person.

There’s a lot more to cosmetic breast augmentation, breast lifts and breast surgery than just putting a little bag under the skin. Cosmetic breast surgery has a steep learning curve that takes years to master.  This is especially true if one is performing symmetry surgery or revision surgery, which is complicated three-dimensional surgery.  It is definitely not for the gynecologist with time on his hands who has just taken a weekend course.


Permalink to Quill Sutures Better Scars

Quill Sutures Better Scars

When considering a plastic surgery procedure, one has to contemplate the potential positive results as well as the negative. Lets face the facts, all plastic surgery incisions are going to have some kind of scaring after they heal. The question is “how do we minimize this?” At Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery in Sacramento, we believe an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.  This applies to a lot of things in life and plastic surgery is definitely one of them.  Particularly in plastic surgery, this notion applies to scars.

In the past, the only thing that could be done for scars was to try and treat them if they healed badly.  There are many different creams, gels and injections which have been developed for this.  Why not try to prevent the problem from the outset?  The new Quill Self-Retaining System (SRS) suture, (which was developed by a plastic surgeon), is the latest advance in suturing and I have absolutely found that its application in plastic surgery clearly leads to better scars.  The Quill sutures have tiny barbs in them that allow for better closure.  They eliminate the need for knots and tighten up the incision like a zipper and then provide for, “controlled tension,” which means that the incision is closed and held closed in a very controlled way.  This method also makes is less likely that the incision may re-open. I have used them in my plastic surgery practice for breast  augmentation surgery, breast lift, tummy tucks and body lifts with excellent results and better scars than ever before.  The introduction of these Quill sutures a few years ago was actually the first major advancement in suture technology since the 1970′s! This is just another example of using new technology to achieve excellent results at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery.


Permalink to To Drain or Not to Drain That is the Question

To Drain or Not to Drain That is the Question

In plastic surgery, there are a lot of opinions when talking about drains. Whenever I perform a breast augmentation at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery I use drains, then I leave the drains in.  These are little 1/8” plastic tubes with perforations on the side that pull out fluid from inside the space that was created for the breast implants.  They come out to a tiny 1/8” spot on the side of the breast and are generally removed within 2 days.  The little spot where the drain was removed will seal itself in about  24 hours.

Not all plastic surgeons use drains after plastic surgery, so why do I?

Before I began using drains when performing breast augmentation the breasts would tend to swell more.  When there is more swelling, the breasts will be more sore.  It could take a month or more for this swelling to come down and can be quite uncomfortable. Because I see it as part of my job as a plastic surgeon to reduce as much pain as possible, I began experimenting with drains as a way to relieve this swelling after plastic surgery.

Generally 60 to 200 CC’s of fluid will come out over the course of 2 days.  Some of this fluid is actually blood which would have to be reabsorbed if it is not removed.  Blood gathering around the implants can accelerate infection.  Blood also seems to be a factor in capsular contracture.  Patients that developed hematomas are more prone to capsular contracture.  I have never had a patient develop an infection where I have had to remove a breast implant.

So in my opinion drains speed healing, make people more comfortable, and help decrease capsular contracture.  Seems to be worth the inconvenience of having a tiny drain for a day or two. At Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery I really try to make all plastic surgery procedures as painless and as comfortable for the patient as possible.


Permalink to Breast Reduction Combined with Vaser Liposuction

Breast Reduction Combined with Vaser Liposuction

Breast Reduction combined with Vaser Liposuction

Some of the happiest patients I have ever had here at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery have been breast reduction patients.  For breast reduction patients it’s as much about feeling better as looking better.  Large breasts can cause severe back neck and shoulder pain as well as deep grooves in the shoulders.  Some of these patients and had large uncomfortable breasts for 10, 20, 30 or 40 years.  That’s a long time to be miserable.

For a standard breast reduction the new nipple position is determined and is marked at a much higher level than it currently is, usually at the level or just above the breast fold.  Additional markings to unfold the breasts are drawn.  In most cases the nipple stays attached to the chest.  The breast is unfolded and the extra tissues are removed.  The breast is then sutured back together in a smaller and higher position.  The new smaller perkier breast is much more comfortable and for the vast majority of patients the back, neck and shoulder pain goes away.

Because most people have breast reduction for functional reasons it is often covered by insurance.  Years ago the insurance companies were much more liberal about who was covered.  But the insurance companies have gotten much cleverer about hanging onto their money.  They have set height and weight restrictions so that many people who are only modestly overweight have to lose considerable amounts of weight to even qualify.  They also have increased the amount that has to be removed up to 500g, about 1 pound.  For many women, who have legitimate complaints of a pound per side, is a lot to remove leading them with minimal breast tissue left.

Other forms of breast reduction included liposuction, periareolar, (only one scar around nipple), or vertical using the lollipop scar.  Individual patients may be better candidates for one or the other of these breast reductions.  Some doctors preferred to do only one type of reduction whereas I am comfortable with several.  If the patient’s breasts are very large and very saggy only the standard anchor scar procedures can take up enough of the excess to get a good result.  For smaller reductions many techniques work very well.

Scars have been a problem in the past.  With the introduction of a new quill barbed sutures which grab a hold tissues better longer scars have become finer and much less likely to stretch out.

Breast reduction surgery changes people’s lives.  Besides making them feel good and look better it can alleviate chronic pain.  I’ve seen two patients who have avoided major back surgery because of this.  I’ve had two other patients who had an incidental breast cancer removed at the very earliest stage, something that never would have happened without surgery.


Permalink to Plastic Surgery Best of 2009 – Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery

Plastic Surgery Best of 2009 – Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery

This is a belated summary of the big ideas and new procedures in the field of plastic surgery that were important in 2009.  2010 is in and who knows what it will bring in terms of plastic surgery innovation advances and controversy.  Everywhere you look there are best of lists: movies and music books television you name it.  I thought I would take a little time to go over my best in plastic surgery of 2009 list.  These are the ideas that have come to the forefront in my practice and from what I have seen at meetings and in the medical literature.  It’s a very subjective list.  But what list isn’t when it comes to best of ?

#1. The BoTax.  The “BoTax” as it was referred to by the media was almost a part of the healthcare bill the Democrats hope to pass this year.  Basically it was going to be a 5% tax on all cosmetic surgeries: Botox, fillers and plastic surgery procedures   The  fact it was defeated is huge for the plastic surgery industry and patients.  It was wrong on so many levels.  It was the entry into the luxury/sin tax model regardless of the fact that most people using cosmetic services make less than $90,000 per year.  Privacy concerns would have been a huge issue and it would have been a logistical nightmare.  Doctors as tax collectors?  It also would have opened the door to other specific luxury taxes.  Why not Harley-Davidsons, golf clubs, massages, facials, etc.?  The possibilities are endless.  In addition the one place this actually was tried was in New Jersey and the plan just plain didn’t work and brought in nowhere near the projected income.  The only thing it really accomplished was increasing the numbers of surgeries performed in the state next door, New York.  I was very happy to see cooler heads prevail and the BoTax dropped from the healthcare legislation.

#2.  Fat is back.  Fat grafting has been around for over 20 years but was always treated as the poor stepchild of liposuction.  Because, in the beginning the results were variable so it was concluded that fat grafting was not scientifically consistent.  Over the years since there have been many more studies successfully supporting the science.  In addition, now there have been several reports that show that what is being transferred are actual stem cells in addition to the fat.  In fact, the stem cells may be the main source of what remains six months to a year later.  There is now more attention being paid since stem cells are the current darlings of scientific research.  There are even efforts being made to purify the stem cells out of the fat to increase survival of the fat cells.  In addition breast augmentation by fat grafting has become an accepted procedure and several investigators showed impressive results.  It’s not going to replace silicone breast augmentation nor is it for everyone.  This is because it is time consuming more expensive and may even require several procedures to get the final result.  Nevertheless there are a number of people who are candidates and would benefit from this procedure which would basically be permanent as opposed implants which have a limited longevity.  I have used fat grafting in Sacramento both for covering small defects and for breast augmentation at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery with wonderful results.

#3. Vaser Hi Def liposuction.  I’ve been doing liposuction in Sacramento for over 20 years, Vaser liposuction for five and Vaser Hi Def liposuction for 1 ½ years.  There is a very confusing array of new technology, six different laser light machines a brand-new water jets Liposuction system and most recently radiofrequency.  However after reading the information and same salinity systems in action as well as speaking to my colleagues in the field of plastic surgery I’ve come several conclusions.

First of all, for multiple area liposuction skin shrinkage and maintaining viability of fat cells transferred Vaser Hi Def liposuction is the most advanced solution.

Second, laser liposuction works for small areas but is too time-consuming for larger areas.  It’s still unclear which wavelengths of light works the best despite all the claims.  There appears to be a lot at heat damage from the laser.  This does not allow viable cells for transfer.

Third, waterjet liposuction seems promising but it’s still really too new to say much about.

#4.  Thermage has had major technological advancements that have changed the game.  The new Thermage is not the same as the old Thermage.  Thermage has been around for years.  It is now in its third generation.  The first generation was effective but quite painful and needed considerable sedation.  Second generation was uncomfortable but manageable with a little sedation.  The new generation is not painful due to vibration of the tip which confuses the nerves in the skin and also has a cooling apparatus.  I’ve had this tested on myself and it is comfortable.  It is an ideal skin tightening: noninvasive, no downtime, procedure.  With the new changes it is now very patient and doctor friendly.  I recommend Thermage in Sacramento at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery for my patients who need a little skin tightening but are not requiring the more dramatic results that can be a result of a tummy tuck, a face lift, arm lift or thigh lift.

#5. The Mini Lift, they’re back with a vengeance.  To paraphrase Shakespeare, ‘a rose as a rose is a rose.’  Mini face lifts have been around forever.  Actually, it can be argued that the mini face lift have been around since the beginning of the last century.  When I was at UCLA as a medical student, the chief made a lot of Hollywood happy by doing mini lifts every few years because they were small surgeries with minimal downtime.  Now there is a   huge move: for mini lifts, cheek lift, S lift or any other letter.  There have been some changes recently such as using deep purse string sutures that considerably improved the result.  Do they work?  For the most part they do.  However if all you have is a hammer everything in the world is a nail.  In other words, one must be prudent in determining whether a mini lift will work based on advice from a knowledgeable plastic surgeon who can offer other solutions if a mini lift will not achieve the desired results such as a regular face lift. Do I perform mini lifts on my patients in Sacramento?  Yes, I have been performing mini face lifts in Sacramento for about the last 25 years.  Now there are some newer features to a mini lift such as vertical vectors, barbed deep sutures and Vaser liposuction   Would they work for everyone?  No, that’s where the judgment comes in.

#6.  Acellular Dermis.  Acellular dermis is a manufactured product, most commonly made of porcine skin which has been treated to remove any chance of reacting with the immune system  This is then placed underneath the skin in breast augmentation revisions for cases of wrinkling or rippling.  It is also used for breast reconstruction to prevent those same problems.  Patients with thin-skin and implant problems have always been difficult because there was so little to work with.  With the acellular dermis there is now a solution that can solve these problems.  It also seems to prevent capsular contracture recurrence after breast augmentation surgery.  The times I have used acellular dermis on my plastic surgery patients in Sacramento in the last year I have been quite pleased with the results.

So there it is.  Some new ideas, some old ideas, and some ideas that have simply come back with a new angle.  It was a very interesting year with the common denominator being progress for plastic surgery patients, better plastic surgery results and safer and easier surgeries.

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  • Andrew Kaczynski, MD

  • Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery
  • 77 Cadillac Drive
  • Sacramento, CA, 95825
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  • Granite Bay, CA 95746
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