Tag Archives: plastic surgery


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 Heidi Montag Lessons

Heidi Montag Lessons

Heidi Montag Breast Augmentation

Heidi Montag's Breasts Are Too Big!

Some stories just won’t go away. The Heidi Montag saga seemed like just another fifteen minutes of fame for a desperate starlet. And it makes for a great story: D-list celebrity trying to get an edge with an extreme makeover that will catapult her to stardom… or not.

But now, after the initial stories cataloging her surgeries mini brow lift, nose revision, facial and buttock fat grafts, breast implant revision, ear pinning, neck liposuction, the stories continue. She’s in pain. She’s happy. She’s not happy. She wants bigger implants. She’s going outside the U.S. for implants she can’t buy in the U.S., and the stories just continue on and on, probably fed by her publicist.

Since Heidi Montag and her drama are not going away anytime soon, what can we all learn from this modern-day tale of transformation that will help us in our thinking about plastic surgery?

If you are considering plastic surgery, it is important to be realistic about what you are considering and why.  Number one, if you don’t want to set yourself up for disappointment the only reason you should have plastic surgery is for yourself.  No one should be considering plastic surgery because someone else is telling you to.  Plastic surgery should not be undertaken to get or keep a husband or boyfriend, nor to get a specific job. The procedure, and your new image, should be its own reward. It should give you a positive self-image and give you more confidence. To expect secondary gain is setting yourself up for disappointment. The exception to this rule may be a situation where someone is looking prematurely old and seeks facial surgery for better competitiveness in the job market. Heidi Montag is not prematurely old.

Less is more–rule one: I don’t know exactly how long Heidi’s ten procedures took, but I try to limit my procedures to less than six hours. The medical standard for safe elective surgery is less than six hours. This means that after six hours the risk of medical complications rises. It is also more difficult to recover when you can’t get in a comfortable position because of the pain resulting from your multiple procedures. Performing fewer procedures in two operations makes for two shorter, safer operations with quicker recovery time, as opposed to one long one with a much longer and more uncomfortable recovery.

Less is more–rule two: As you age you should only have the minimum amount of work done to correct the problems. There is no such thing as prophylactic facelifts, although some people claim to do them. I’m okay with the chin and nose changes. But the brow lift and fat grafts actually made her look older boring here and harsher. Nothing can replace the freshness of youth and once it’s gone it’s gone.

Less is more—rule three: And important thing to remember about breast augmentation is that breasts can be too big! The only kind of movie Heidi Montag’s new breasts will get her into is the kind with three X’s, rather than snagging Meghan Fox’s roll in Transformers 3! I’ve put in large implants, even the maximum size, 800cc, but these are cases where the woman could handle them because of her height and the size of her chest. If Heidi wants to go bigger than her current 700cc implants, in order to really see a difference she would need to go to 1000cc which is way too much for anyone, much less a thin woman who is 5’2.

The downside of really big implants: Bigger scars to put them in for silicone implants. Putting in 1000cc  saline implants would be a nightmare. They would come down to her knees in no time.

What goes up must come down. Implants that large would have minimal muscle support. There is no breast lift that would lift them up for any significant length of time. She will have to downsize in order to have a successful breast lift.

Implants that big would make her skin tissues paper thin over time. Wrinkles and ripples would be visible.

Implants that large would actually pull down on her shoulders and neck. They would likely cause severe back pain. Most women who naturally have breasts that size eventually come in for breast reduction.

Just because a surgery can be done, doesn’t necessarily mean it should be done. She’s not yet in the ranks of plastic surgery monsters but if she keeps this up, there is little doubt she will be listed on one of many scary plastic surgery Websites.  Good plastic surgery is designed to makes people look like themselves and doesn’t make you look like a different species. Is she on her way? Only time will tell.


Permalink to Facelift By OBGYN?

Facelift By OBGYN?

With the current wave of “Alice in Wonderland” mania, a recent email from a friend reminded me of a scene in that classic book.  In that scene, Alice is talking to the caterpillar and he keeps asking her, “who are you?” This reminder, in my mind, led to my impressions of a current phenomenon I’ve been seeing and reading about lately regarding the business of plastic surgery. It occurred to me that it seemed apropos to ask any doctor, offering plastic surgery, that very same question. This is because the answer to that question can be very vague.

There is a disturbing trend in medicine where internists, family doctors, gynecologists and other specialists are offering to do plastic surgery procedures as a way of making a little cash, “on the side.”  Dermatologists and E.N.T. (ear, nose & throat) doctors are expanding into areas where they have little or no training.  Because of this, complications are escalating like never before.

I know someone who went in for a yearly checkup and found her internists now owned a roomful of lasers next-door and was promoting their use.  The largest liposuction clinic in my community is run by an internists and an emergency room doctor.  Family practice doctors are opening, “med spas.”   Some E.N.T. doctors are beginning to perform breast augmentation surgery and gynecologists are doing face-lifts. What’s going on?

A recent article in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery by Matthew Camp, titled Who is Providing Aesthetic Surgery? A detailed examination of the geographic distribution and training backgrounds of cosmetic practitioners in Southern California put some insight into this question.

So what is going on?

Medicine is hard-pressed for fair reimbursement by health insurance companies.  Despite any statements to the contrary, it is likely going to get worse in the future.  More and more doctors will be attempting to supplement their income by offering plastic surgery procedures in which they have little or no training.

Plastic surgery is literally the only cash business left in medicine, especially if you include hair transplants, laser hair removal, varicose veins, and all noninvasive treatments under that umbrella.

Individual magazines devoted to different specialties routinely promote, “boosting your income by adding cosmetic services.”  Medical meetings also promote one-day workshops in different procedures and technologies.

Makers of cosmetic products and devices are actively promoting their goods to non-plastic surgeons as a way of expanding their markets.  Moreover, those that are not intentionally marketing to these doctors are none-the-less bound by law to sell to these doctors if the doctor orders from them.  This is because in California, a medical doctor has a license that entitles him or her to do anything they see medically fit in the office.  He can do brain surgery, heart surgery, or sex changes.  If something goes wrong, let the lawyers sort it out after the fact.  There is no restraint of trade for physicians.  Hospitals monitor doctors and only allow them to have privileges for those procedures in which they have actual training and/or certification.  This is why most of these practitioners who are expanding their offerings work only in their offices where they are completely unsupervised and unregulated.

The economic situation that is leading gynecologists to start offering facelifts is also placing very young plastic surgeons, just out of school, in a difficult situation.  Therefore, they are vulnerable to being scooped up by franchise corporations that have catchy names and usually offer one specialty procedure at what they suggest is a discount price that an established and experienced plastic surgeon cannot compete with. The reality is that in most cases they are at or very near regular market prices for these procedures.  These “McFacelift” shops or “LipoKing” franchises perform procedures with pressure on the doctors and staff to do as many per day and as fast as they possibly can.  To quote from the Camp article, “the development of aesthetic practices with individual providers are considered to be interchangeable and replaceable is becoming ever more prominent.”  This is particularly the case among the “medispas.” The practices are often named after a geographic location with the cachet of affluence such as Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills or La Jolla.  In these practices, or perhaps better described as “mills,” the practitioners are employees of the corporate owner of the clinical facility and are pushed to produce revenue.  The divorce of the practice from the name of a responsible physician has the potential to have a profound impact on the doctor-patient relationship and how patients select a provider.

Therefore, as the Romans said, “caveat emptor;” Let the buyer beware. This is especially true in California since there is essentially no enforcement by the medical board, which has recently been stripped of most of its funding.  Many complaints and many bodies must pile up before anything will be done.  Any doctor can do virtually anything in his office and will not be stopped until there are large numbers of complaints or he kills or maims a patient.  It is amazing that we require such tight restrictions on many other fields such as airline pilots.  What is happening is the equivalent of allowing someone who knows how to fly a single engine plane to go ahead and sit at the controls of 747, bringing it down for a landing into a major metropolitan area without any training.  Do you want the professional airline pilot with a complete education or someone who had a one-day course in the 747 before he takes your life into his hands? On the flip side, I am a trained plastic surgeon who has had thousands of hours of training and experience in plastic surgery but I have also had some training in many other aspects of medicine.  Legally, I can perform brain surgery and heart transplants in my own operating room, but would I be your best choice if you needed these procedures?  What if I were to offer to do the surgery at a discount?  …Yeah, I didn’t think so.

If you’re considering a plastic surgeon, do what the caterpillar did.  Ask, “who are you?”  “Are you board-certified?”  “Are you board-certified in plastic surgery?”  “How many of these procedures have you done?”  “How long have you been providing this procedure?”  “Do you have hospital privileges?  Or is plastic surgery just another way to boost your income.”  Or, “are you a cosmetic surgeon” which is essentially a meaningless term since there is no recognized Board of cosmetic surgery.

Caveat emptor. Do your homework and trust your gut feelings.  If you feel unsure or apprehensive, regardless of whom the person is, move on.  Plastic surgery is not like having your hair done.  Some people spend more time researching a vacation then researching a plastic surgeon, don’t be one of them.


Permalink to Local Anesthesia, General or Sedation for Plastic Surgery?

Local Anesthesia, General or Sedation for Plastic Surgery?

There seems to be a trend of late, judging by what is out on the Web and in advertising, to promote plastic surgery procedures under local anesthesia…  only… nothing else… stone cold sober.  Nothing to make you feel relaxed, to take the edge off, nothing to soften or eliminate the sights, the sounds,  and other physical and emotional reactions to having a plastic surgery procedure performed on your body.

Now, I do perform some plastic surgery procedures using local anesthesia pretty much every week.  A little scar revision, a facial contour in a small area, or a micro-liposuction on the face.  But most of the plastic surgery I perform at Advanced Concepts in Plastic Surgery in Sacramento are performed with sedation or with a general anesthetic.

First of all what is sedation? Sedation is when the patient has an IV and receives sedation medication through it but remains conscious.  There are several different kinds of drugs that put the patient in a particularly happy place.  This means you’re not completely asleep but you are also not aware of what’s going on, you are very comfortable and breathing without the help of a breathing machine.

So why would you not want to be aware of what is being done to you?  I’ll use myself as an example.  Several years ago I had a wisdom tooth erupt.  I guess I’m a late bloomer. I had it removed under local anesthesia only.  The dentist did a great job as I did not feel any pain.  But it was a very unpleasant experience with all the rasping, grinding and pulling.  In addition to that, my mouth and jaw was very sore from staying open.  So, how do you think I would have felt after two or three more just like that?  So let me state the case.  If I have to do that again, I just don’t want to know about it, and I assume my patients would rather not experience that kind of discomfort during their plastic surgery procedure either.

Where does strict local anesthesia work best?  Local anesthesia works in small areas and in a very limited short plastic surgery procedure.  When do you want sedation?  When doing a longer procedure with larger areas where they may still have feeling in spite of the local anesthesia, like scar tissue or when working under the muscle.  When you have a longer procedure it’s difficult to lay in one position for hours.  The local anesthesia may wear off and need to be freshened or it will become uncomfortable.  My goal for all my patients is to have everything as painless as possible on all levels.  When you do it under strict local anesthesia, there is always some amount of pain involved.

Another issue has to do with the regulations of surgery centers.  In California, if you do plastic surgery with sedation or general anesthetic, the facility has to be licensed by an agency that licenses surgery centers.  Currently there are two main ones AAAHC and AAAASF.  I actually do inspections for the latter.  When you pass inspection for unique standards of organization, cleanliness, accountability, and safety that means that your physical plant has been approved, it also means that you have hospital privileges for the procedure being done.  However if the procedures are under straight local anesthesia, you do not need to meet the strict standards of the physical plant or hygiene and safety accountability.

That certainly doesn’t mean that everyone promoting, “local anesthesia only procedures,” is doing it to avoid regulation of shoddy or dangerous conditions, but… let the buyer beware.

What about general anesthesia for plastic surgery procedures?  Even when using lots of local anesthesia some surgeries are very stimulating to the nervous system.  This is because local anesthesia blocks the pain stimulus but not necessarily pressure, pulling or heat.  One of the worst horror stories I’ve heard about local anesthesia revolve around a patient that had a breast augmentation under local anesthesia, with some sedation, and “woke up” in the middle of the procedure and was told to be still,” because we have to finish.”  They felt and  experienced much more than they wanted to.  Sometimes you need what is called muscle relaxation sedation to do what you need to do, i.e., put in a breast implant or suture up the abdominal muscles.  A light general anesthetic is perfect for a breast augmentation, mommy makeover or total facial rejuvenation such as a facelift because it keeps you perfectly comfortable for those longer procedures and often times actually requires less total medication and sedation.

In summary: straight local anesthesia is great for very small procedures. But IV sedation or   general anesthesia are better solutions for making the patient comfortable for many plastic surgery procedures.  My goal for the patients is a painless plastic surgery, and local anesthesia is not the best way to achieve  that in every case.

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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
  • (916) 925-5522