Dr. Bermant, I was not being sarcastic at all. There's no doubt you're leaps and bounds better than the surgeon I consulted with.
The more knowledge I have on this surgery, the more questions I have. In regards to this: "By removing the gland early, Dr. Bermant can better judge how much of the surrounding fat will be needed to move back under the nipple areola to prevent a deformity." What happens further down the road, like say if the person leans out, does the fat tissue used to contour the breast get burned off?
The fat I am using is the nearby chest fat with my
Fat Flap, trying to preserve the blood supply to the fat.
I advise my patients to get to a weight they are happy with
before surgery. Weight loss after surgery is not predictable.
Men tend to put fat on first in the chest and stomach regions. We take it off those areas last. Contour the chest to the local level of fat, lose weight, and if the man loses it in the typical way and not lose as much in the chest region, it will look like the gynecomastia has recurred. The exception is my extremely low percentage fat
Bodybuilders with Gynecomastia. For these individuals, I prefer to sculpt them at their off season weight. When you go down to extremes such as marathon runners and other athletes, having some fat on the body opens avenues of reconstruction like my fat flap sculpture. Check out that last links before and after surgery clinical photos and the competition posing pictures.
However, the fat cells on the chest do reduce with weight loss. They just lose fat according to the normal pattern for that part of the body. Remaining gland / scar left on the chest does not. Weight loss can help with the fat component of gynecomastia. Remaining gland can stand out even further. That is why I prefer to target the gland first and then contour the remaining fat.
I approach this as a surgical sculptor and prefer the coarse tool first then the one of refinement. Losing weight is a coarse tool. The Plastic Surgery is best reserved for refinement.
I agree about the education aspect. That is why I put so much detail on my website. In my opinion, part of the result of my sculpture comes from the patient education. If you are really serious about learning, start at the first page of my gynecomastia section and follow through the entire 200+ pages of details about this condition. There are over 2000 before and after pictures / movies about this condition to demonstrate this commitment to my patient education. Beyond that, our patients who travel a distance to see us often start out with our
Preliminary Remote Discussion to minimize travel to Virginia.
If you are interested in learning more about this process, Jane is my office manager. She can normally be reached at our office by phone Monday - Friday 9-5 Eastern Time at (804) 748-7737.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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