Hello Doctors,
Can a scar tissue under an areola feel very, very soft, just like fat/gland and be contributing to some puffiness? If the areola is flat for some time after surgery but then starts protruding is this likely due to scar tissue (even though there is nothing hard under the areolas)?
On a slightly unrelated subject: If the contour of the deeper tissues is good and consistent (i.e. no crater), why do surgeons still seem to leave some tissue under the areola before re-attaching it (I mean the tissue directly attached to the areola, not the deeper tissues attached to the chest muscle/fascia/fat)? Is it to retain the areola shape structure?
Is it easy to differentiate in surgery the areola muscle from the other tissues and remove all the tissues under it without injuring the areola muscle, or is this something very difficult and that is why some tissue is usually left behind?
Thank you,
D
Scar tissue like gland or fat can be firm or soft. You have cuts from before, each such injury heals with a scar. How well that scar evolves depends on the injury, how / if it was repaired,
Scar Care,
Compression Therapy and other factors.
Puffy Nipple Complication After Gynecomastia Surgery can consist of residual gland, scar tissue, loose skin, and other factors. Feeling the tissue alone does not differentiate what the nature of this tissue is. The main factor is if there is a contour defect. This contour can be from fat, gland, or scar tissue. Check this link out and see what I mean. Without support, the nipple areola tissues attach to the muscle producing a
Crater Deformity when the skin is adherent to the deeper tissues or a
Bursa Crater Defect when this skin is free floating over a defect of supporting tissues.
The normal chest should look good both at rest and during animation. Fat is our body's lubrication layer permitting the skin to move naturally. Firm scar tissue or gland does not move or compress like the surrounding fatty tissues. That is why targeting the gland first is the hallmark of my
Dynamic Technique, I want to have results that look good from all angles and during animation. Be cautious with doctors that demonstrate their results with just in a few photographs using selected angles that seem to change from one patient to the next.
The
Thin Under Skin Areola Muscle is diffuse extending from the skin itself to surrounding structures. It looks very much like connective tissue and dermis and comes in various degrees of development in different patients. Some of my patients actually have a well enough defined muscle layer here that I repair it during my surgical sculpture as a separate layer.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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