I have gyne since i was 13-14 now i am 18 and i finally got to tell my parents about it hoping for them to pay me the surgery since i dont have money, unfortunatly they think it might dissapear in the next 2 years.
In 2 days im going to consult the doc for evaluation who willl then send me to the surgeon, but im worried that he might say that i have to wait those 2 years until growth is fully ended to undergo surgery.
In this case ill have to waste more 2 years of my life, so i just wanted to ask you whats the probability of a doc saying that ( since ive seen many interpretations and opinions regarding gyne from docs ) and what are the counter arguments, since this is a one time shot, i really need to pull it off.
Gynecomastia that has not resolved by 2 years typically will not go away on its own.
1.92m and 110kg right now, before that i was 87-90kg and had 10%BF.
Thing is, when i was fully defined i had practically the same gyne as i have now, when all this added weight the gyne got a little worse but no great changes, practically cant note anything myself.
Pics of me currently
http://i758.photobucket.com/albums/xx224/stopduckhating/IMG_0666.jpg
http://i758.photobucket.com/albums/xx224/stopduckhating/IMG_0667.jpg
You can clearly see that the left side has more fat that the right side.
If that 20 kilograms is fat, and from the limited photographs there is a good chance of that, then it is not healthy to wear that extra weight.
Have you checked your
Body Mass Index with a BMI Calculator? My calculator has a Metric version where you can plug in meters and kilograms. By definition you are almost obese at the high range of overweight. BMI does not differentiate between fat, muscle, and bone.
Body Fat Calculators can help with the fat percentage and are better at helping define the fat component.
Plastic Surgery is not an alternative to losing weight. With surgery, a fat person will still look like a fat person, just one with smaller breasts.
The problem is that
Male Fat Pattern extends around the chest, under the arms, and around the back. Plastic Surgery is not a good tool for a global fat problem.
I advise my patients to get to a weight / body fat percentage they are comfortable with before considering surgery.
Weight Loss Before Gynecomastia Surgery can help with the fat, but not the gland. However, you cannot pick where your fat comes from.
Plastic Surgery is also not a good jump start tool for weight loss. I have seen disasters from patients from other doctors with deformities from significant weight loss after their surgery. Men tend to put fat on first in the belly and chest bands. We tend to take of those areas last. If your fat comes off in that typical pattern and less comes off the chest and belly, the contour problems will again show. Early surgery and depending on weight loss to predictably change the body is a nasty gamble. Revision surgery is always an option but that is an added expense and recovery.
No Surgery Body Shaping Garments are a better temporizing choice.
As a surgical sculptor, I view weight loss as a coarse tool and my plastic surgery as a refinement tool. I prefer to use the coarse tool first, and then my sculpture for refinement.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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