Hi
I have recently found this site and I am confident that I have gynecomastia and 1st experienced the problem when I was 12ish (at the time I was fit and healthy with normal weight). I am now 23 and since 18 have increased in weight (now 17.5 stone and 5'10). I am now losing weight as I am confident that surgery will change my life.
I wanted to know when to have surgery? Is it right to lose enough weight to be considered average first? I am concerned that if I have surgery now I won't get the long term result that I want.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
:-)
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. A
BMI Calculator does not differentiate between fat, muscle, and bone.
Body Fat Calculators can help with the fat percentage and are better at helping with the fat component. And yes, my BMI calculator link will work with Stone and Metric units.
For those with too much body fat,
Weight Loss Before Gynecomastia Surgery can help with the fat, but not the gland. However, you cannot pick where your fat comes from.
The biggest change I have noticed over the years, is that patients who lose weight tell me that they feel so much better about themselves. It often changes the front to a degree, but the sides and back can see a major benefit from getting the excess total body fat under control.
Plastic Surgery is 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. Early surgery and depending on weight loss to predictably change the body is a nasty gamble.
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.
For those having compromise surgery before (or without) weight loss, try to check out before and after pictures from many different angles. (You should carefully evaluate results with more than just one or 2 views for each patient, especially if those views change from patient to patient.
Plastic Surgery is not an alternative to losing weight. A fat person will still look like a fat person, just one with smaller breasts.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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