Hi Doc's!
Thanks for creating this board and helping all of us out here. I finally got the courage to get my gynecomastia surgery scheduled and I'm also getting some lipo work done on the flanks and hips. Total surgery time should be around 3-4 hours.
I always assumed I would be getting general anesthesia, but the anesthesiologist today recommended epidural anesthesia instead. She said she will still keep me sedated so I wont know what is going on with epidural, but if she wants she can turn off the IV drip and have me recover within a few minutes if she wants me to move on my side or something. The anesthesiologist also mentioned with epidural I will have something stuck into my spine but that is still a lot better than general since general anesthesia basically paralyzes you but with epidural you breathe on your own.
I'm 29 and 185 pounds and am fit enough to undergo either procedure. From what she was saying it sounds like epidural with sedation sounds like a better option compared to general anesthesia, but I can't find anyone else on this board recommending it.
What do you doc's think? Do you prefer general or epidural anesthesia with sedation for your procedures?
She said she's board certified and has tons of epidurals for liposuction and thinks its the better option for me. So, as you can tell I'm pretty confused right now.
Thanks again for all your good work!
Epidural Anesthesia involves placing numbing medication just next to the spinal cord in the back and just does not make any sense to me at all for Male Chest Abdomen and Love Handles. I saw many operations in China where very high epidural anesthesia was used for blocking chest surgery. It was cheap, much cheaper than general or sedation, but blocks that high tend to knock out a patient's ability to breath, so they were intubated (a tube put into their airway to help them breath.) I remember the Chinese patients yelling at the surgeons during the operation with the block not being adequate. To use an epidural block for the lower body and sedation and local for the upper also makes no sense. I can perform an entire full
Tumescent Tummy Tuck Abdominoplasty under my tumescent local anesthesia with sedation alone. No epidural. No added risks. This surgery involves much more than just liposuction and if I can have comfort levels before, during, and after surgery without such added blocks then the real question is
Why Add the Epidural Block? You can learn more about the
Comfort after Tumescent Tummy Tuck here.An epidural block can be used to keep a patient comfortable through an inadequate
Tumescent Anesthesia, but such patients without an adequate tumescent block tend to have much more swelling, bruising, and discomfort after surgery. If there is adequate tumescence, what is the added advantage to the block? I can not think of any.
If I was the patient, I would want to know more, see early after surgery pictures to see that doctor's
Bruising and Swelling After Surgery, and learn more about their
Patient Comfort After Surgery: how much pain medication patients needed and what their
Recovery After Surgery was like. Each doctor has their own comfort levels of what they offer. Learning what that results in can be a powerful advantage!
Good luck on your surgery.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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