Dr. Bermant - I've noticed that you always talk about *arms above the head and *pecs flexed in reference to movements during which a person's gyne situation might be expected to look 'at it's worst'.
I have never said such views showed the chest "at it's worst." Flexing views and arms up over head show critical components of how the body looks while living life, playing sports, having fun. Even walking at the beach, we do not go around with our arms rigidly at our sides. I work with many bodybuilders. Many complained about results they had from other surgeons looking terrible during competition or just while enjoying their body in motion. That is why I evolved several different sets of standard pictures for gynecomastia. The original set had one arms up overhead, and arms on hips muscles relaxed and then flexed. The set for after gynecomastia surgery for revision expanded the flexing views to include obliques and laterals relaxed and flexing. Some of the adhesion and craters better show up (results look worse with problems) when adding the additional flexing views. The videos are the most critical of the recording media short of seeing the results live. The ultimate is to look good in person living life, moving about without the emotional stress of distorted tissues.
Since we see so many patients from around the world, I needed a way to help them demonstrate their problems and minimize travel to Virginia. When I can define the problem before travel, we can schedule our patients for a tentitive surgery that still requires the confirmatory in office exam. These standard sets have been incredibly valuable for the vast majority of our patients minimizing travel.
Beyond that, I found that such documentation was better at defining the deformity and quality of the sculpture. When evaluating before and after pictures that only include relaxed front and oblique views, you are only seeing part of the picture. The chest should look good in the entire set of standard views and even better on videos. This is critical in understanding problems and the quality of surgery offered. When the surgery looks good in all of these views and video, then you are really talking about a better sculpture than one that only looks good with muscles relaxed or arms at the sides.
Now this seems weird to me, as someone 5 years post-op - gland excision+lipo ( who is definitely needing and currently planning a near-future revision), because for me - raising my arms and flexing my pecs are the positions in which my gyne is most minimized, and looks most flattering ()
When my chest is just relaxed,unflexed,with arms hanging at my sides (especially if I'm hunching forward a little) is when my chest looks at it's worst, with my nipples being at their puffiest and pointiest in this position...
Seems to be quite the opposite of the "least flattering positions" anecdotes we're usually hearing of, as both arms raised and pecs flexed are when my pointy,puffy nips WILL actually contract a lot, thus making these the most flattering positions for me..
just thought this was weird in terms of how it compares to these 2 most common "least flattering" chest situations you're so often referring to...
I have a third set of standard views that evolved to show issues of loose skin. When arms are brought overhead, or shoulders brought back, skin is tightened. For these patients, bending over, letting gravity pull the excess proved to be the most reliable method to show this problem. Loose tissues is the most difficult distortion to document well without the hands on examination. Check the male mastopexy section to see those views in action in defining the problem, the compromises and results achieved. For the more subtle forms of loose skin issues, the arms up overhead look better. For the individual with scar adhesion and loose skin, the arms up overhead can sometimes show both components.
We help patients explore their options during consultations and my Preliminary Remote Discussion. We guide our patients which set of views will best serve efforts to minimize travel to Virginia. When images alone do not suffice, then the in office exam is needed before tentative surgery can be scheduled.
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