Please tell me what you see and what you suggest. I still have some fat to lose but I feel as though my skin wont keep up with it. My skin has been through a lot ( quick weight loss and gain). I did not take care of my body when i was younger(i.e. used lots of alcohol, marijuana, drugs ect). I really wanted to shape my body but didn't know how to go about it. I had weight about 200 lbs then lost about 50 lbs. But didn't look healthy so i started working out and gaining muscle. I am doing a lot better but I still have a long way to go. I think it may just take time and hard work/dedication. I would like to know what you guys think. I will post two pics at a time as i don't understand how to post any more that that per post. Thank you.
Congratulations on your weight loss so far! Is it not great getting that extra weight off? However, it sounds like you are a work in progress. Did you put that weight back on or are these pictures after the weight loss?
Have you checked your
BMI Calculator (Body Mass Index)? However, Body Mass Index does not take into account muscle mass vs. fat.
Body Fat Analyzers can help define how much of the problem is fat. I recommend such body fat analyzers when my patients are trying to access their progress and replacing fat with muscle. The scale may not change, but the body composition will.
Last of the pictures. I made sure to get the correct angles specified by the physician who seems to be very proactive on here. I would like to hear your opinion. Hopefully I am not exhausting you with the same ole same ole explanation........
For patients with major weight loss, loose skin can become a factor. Loose skin comes in many different degrees. For my patients trying to understand if drooping skin is a part of the problem I use a different set of
Standard Pictures to evaluate male chest loose skin and gynecomastia. The bending over views permit gravity to pull the loose skin and show how much. The extra views of tensing muscles from different angles are an attempt to document with photos if the
Nipples are Hanging Below the Pectoral Muscles.
For my patients, I recommend first getting to a weight they feel comfortable with. If there is remaining contour problem, then consider the various possible options that surgery may have to offer. Weight loss before surgery is usually much better than weight loss after surgery. Weight loss is a coarse tool,
Plastic Surgery is better reserved for refinement. This is especially true when tissue sagging is a factor. Why lift sagging tissue, lose more weight, and see that tissue sag again from further deflation?
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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