Yesterday I had an operation and I only had liposuction. My doctor said that she will do liposuction and if there will be to much glandular tissue she will also do an excision. After surgery, as soon as I woke up my first question was if I had mostly fat or glandular tissue. The doctor said that she did only lipo because I had also some glandular tissue, but because this tissue was so small and soft she destroyed it and sucked it out with lipo so no excision was needed.
So my question is, if glandular tissue is not very big and strong and firm, instead is small and soft, can it be removed with liposuction only?
I should also mention that today, 1 day after surgery when nurse changed the bandages, my chest looked great, although a little swollen but nipples were smaller and chest looked completely flat.
Im also almost sure that I had some glandular tissue because I could feel it under my hand, especially on my left side where nipple was very puffy. So again, can glandular tissue be removed with lipo only as my doctor said to me and although I've seen my chest for a little time, it looked great.
Thanks for help!
Sorry for my English, I know it's not perfect...
When gland comprises a trivial component of the contour, liposuction alone can be enough to contour the chest. You cannot tell before surgery what is gland vs fat. Although gland tends to be firm and fat soft, fat can be firm and gland soft. Only with the passage of time and an accurate assessment will tell if you have had a successful contouring unless you have a great looking chest with negligible or no swelling. If that has been achieved, as I typically do with my techniques, then you might be able to tell now.
Unfortunately you care correct. Liposuction does not manage gland. I have seen too many unhappy patients done elsewhere to believe that it does. Quite a few of the patients I have seen over the years actually came asking for help after surgery by doctors who had written papers claiming that liposuction managed gland. Now I do not see their success stories, but nor have I seen any documentation in the literature that the gland truly is managed by the liposuction methods. I saw so many such unhappy patients that I coined the term Puffy Nipple Complication after gynecomastia surgery and published what I found during my revision of such cases with examples.
If your contour looks good once swelling goes down with my Standard After Gynecomastia Photo series and even more critically on the Standard Videos, then truly the results have been achieved by liposuction. One of the most common finding has been that the liposuction dug a hole in the fat for the remaining gland to sit in. Unfortunately, gland does not compress like fat. That is why when flexing muscles, lifting arms up over head, the way tissues compress is different. That is why the hallmark of my Dynamic Technique is to target the gland first.
To best understand how your surgeon's techniques evolve after surgery, you will need to find examples of that methods evolution. What you see on my site is typical for my patients but not necessarily other methods. I post such examples so that my patients can feel comfortable and relaxed after surgery about their contour and how they will be evolving. Perhaps other surgeons will similarly adopt similar tools to help with their patients' stress and education.
So if, once swelling resolves, it looks great while enjoying life, playing sports, flexing, and swimming, then excision was not needed. If it only looks good while swollen or only in a few still photos, then you may have become another complication of residual deformity. This should be a contour deformity that is visible, not just something that can be felt. Ideal surgery leaves no scars. That is not realistic. We can endeavor to come close, but I advise my patients that the contour is the main goal. Some scar beautifully, but expecting that is beyond surgeon skill as I know it.
I also have not found a way to document that aspect, how tissue feels, scar quantification, has escaped us despite many years of trying. Perhaps someday someone more cleaver will come up with a method. I have not found it. So for now documenting the dynamic component is as close as I have been able to design.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, M.D.