Drs. Jacobs and Bermant,
Thank you so much for your input. It gives me a better idea of what I am dealing with.
I have one final question. Yes, I am overweight by 50lbs. I am 6'4" 280 lbs and my ideal weight is 230 lbs. Prior to surgery, is it best to lose the 50 lbs or does it even matter?
Thanks again for your info....I really appreciate it.
John
For my patients, I advise them to get to a weight they are comfortable with before surgery. This becomes especially critical for the person with a sagging chest. Losing weight can also result in loose skin. How well skin adopts to the new size can vary depending on many factors. Lift the chest with surgery. If you then lose weight, why do you think you will not droop again?
Unfortunately, weight loss after surgery is not predictable, you cannot pick where the weight goes on, nor where the weight comes off. Men tend to put fat first on the breast and belly. We take the fat off those regions last. If someone has their chest contoured even before weight loss, then loses weight in a normal male pattern and does not lose as much in the chest region, it can look like the breasts came back.
Losing weight can help with the fat of gynecomastia but does not help with remaining gland / scar tissue. I have seen many cases that losing weight that unmasks the remaining gland / scar tissue. Patients feel better about their bodies at the lower weight, but how the contour looks can be unpredictable.
As a surgical sculptor I prefer using a coarse tool first and then one of refinement. Losing weight is that coarse tool. Plastic Surgery is best reserved for refinement. I also have had patients who lost weight after surgery. Some got away with it and were happy with their new contour. For others it came off in a fashion that left results less satisfactory, you just cannot predict. The unhappy patients were those from other doctors' prior surgery, and then had lost the weight. Most said they were upset that they had not been educated about such issues before surgery. Education is knowledge and puts the power with the patient. Although sometimes you can get away with it, or use revision surgery at additional cost, to me it seems just more logical to be patient and work on the weight first, then the surgery.
There is an exception to this format. The extreme athlete / bodybuilder. For these patients, I prefer to sculpt their off season weight. As body fat gets extremely low, healing can be impaired and there are few resources left to target gland first. A great example is this
Competition Body Builder with Gynecomastia. Look at his body fat before surgery in his competition posing, the fat he had during surgery (obviously more), and the competition posing after surgery.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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