Author Topic: Anesthesia for Surgery  (Read 2969 times)

Offline zado611

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Do surgeons use local or "twilight" for most surgeries?

DrBermant

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Do surgeons use local or "twilight" for most surgeries?

Local anesthesia alone is not enough to maximize comfort for good chest contouring. Plastic Surgery Anesthesia is an art form.  Sedation manages the patients conscious level.  Local and Tumescent Anesthesia manage the numbness and comfort.  For almost all of my gynecomastia surgery, local anesthesia with heavy sedation provides a safer much more comfortable method.  The patient starts with medication from an IV given by my Anesthetist.  He is an artist who blends various medications that gently drift each patients off to sleep.  We have been working as a team for many years.  By the end of the operation the patient awakes, comfortable, with no nausea, and unaware of the time that has transpired.  My local anesthesia and tumescence is given after the patient is asleep. 

I prefer local anesthesia alone for long nipple reduction gynecomastia. For almost all other gynecomastia surgery, local anesthesia with sedation provides a safer much more comfortable method.  When 2 stages are needed, as with this problem of enlarged nipples of gland and nipple tissue, I perform the first stage with local sedation, and the second with local alone.  For my upper body lift surgery, when I have to operate all around the chest - front / back, I need Light General Anesthesia.  This is still my Tumescent Technique, but adds the safety of airway protection while the patient is in the prone position.

I perform many revision gynecomastia surgery on patients first done elsewhere.  Many have told me how unpleasant their first doctor's experiences were under local anesthesia alone or General Anesthesia for liposuction and gynecomastia surgery.

You can find an extensive individual patients' experience with comfort and my Tumescent Technique Anesthesia for gynecomastia here.

If you prefer direct links to each of those discussions:


Hope this helps,

Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Gynecomastia


Offline Dr. Elliot Jacobs

  • Elliot W. Jacobs, MD, FACS
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    • Gynecomastia Surgery
There are three types of anesthesia for any operation.

1. Local anesthesia:  the surgeon (or dentist, for example) injects numbing medicine in and around the area to be worked on.  You initially feel the needle prick -- then everything becomes numb.  The doctor can do his work and there will be no pain -- although you may be aware of some pushing and pulling sensations. You will be totally awake.  This type of anesthesia is useful for very small gyne or work done on the nipple/areolas only.

2. IV (intra-venous) sedation (sometimes called "twilight sleep" and technically called "conscious sedation").  This is usually administered by a separate anesthesiologist (usually an MD, sometimes a nurse anesthetist) although some surgeons like to do this themselves (I usually don't recommend a surgeon doing both jobs).  You will be gently sleeping due to a mixture of medications -- with no pain and no awareness of anything. The surgeon can do his operation and you have absolutely no pain and no memory of it. Yet you wake up with no nausea, grogginess or hangover -- and are quite lucid from the moment you open your eyes.  I think this is the ideal type of anesthesia -- and I use it 99% of the time.

3. General Anesthesia:  you are "out", unconscious, with a tube in your throat and a machine breathing for you.  Some doctors prefer this and it is perfectly acceptable.  Wake-up is slower, there may be grogginess which may last up to 24 hours.  This anesthesia is useful and necessary for major gyne surgery which may include lateral chest fat, skin removal, nipple elevation, mastectomies, etc -- ie for surgery that will take several hours.

Dr Jacobs
Dr. Jacobs 
Certified: American Board of Plastic Surgery
Fellow: American College of Surgeons
Practice sub-specialty in Gynecomastia Surgery
4800 North Federal Highway
Boca Raton, Florida 33431
561  367 9101
Email:  dr.j@elliotjacobsmd.com
Website:  http://www.gynecomastiasurgery.com
Website:  http://www.gynecomastianewyork.c


 

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