Hi there,
I've recently been diagnosed with Gynecomastia and seen by a consultant.
In the meeting I was told that I had to cut out anything that could imbalance my hormones including pot and alcohol.
Unfortunatley, I've also been told that I cannot use any heavy weights at the gym.
As a frequent gym-goer this is killing me. I love working out and staying in shape and the fact that I'm now only allowed to do light weights with high reps is killing me.
What I wanted to find out was the reason behind this and also know if there was any way around this so I can go back to building muscle.
I'm being seen again in 4 months and this is a long time to go without working out.
Thanks in advance
That is a good question for the doctor giving such advice. It makes little sense to me.
For my patients, and I work with many bodybuilders and athletes with gynecomastia, working out is no problem up until the surgery. The exception is injury. Elective surgery should not be performed on bruised or recently injured tissue. Bruise your chest before the operation and any surgeon offering the surgery on bruised tissue is risking a much higher complication rate.
After surgery, recovery is like recovering from a sprain. Push the injured tissues too far too soon and you will slow down the healing process. Just as in a sprain, there is no one set date for return to activities. My patients are back to reasonable activities the day of surgery, but they are protecting the injured tissues. You can see this by looking at the hands over head views of tissue evolving early after surgery on my site. Ignore the healing process and the tissues will show they are unhappy, swell, and take longer to recover.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, M.D.Board CertifiedAmerican Board of Plastic Surgery
Member:
American Society of Plastic Surgeons and
American Society of Aesthetic Plastic SurgeonsSpecializing in Gynecomastia and Surgical Sculpture of the Male Chest(804) 748-7737