Hey,
Found this website, think its quite awesome.
I've just been told that I may have gynecomastia, im 5.11 and quite overweight. I used to weigh around 19.5 stones, but am now down to 16.5. I'm at the early stage of my consultation (having blood checked etc), but am I too heavy for surgery?
Congratulations on your weight loss! Does it not feel much better with that weight off? 3 stones or 42 pounds is a great deal of weight. However, it sounds like you are a work in progress.
A
BMI Calculator (Body Mass Index) can help to a certain degree, but Body Mass Index does not take into account muscle mass vs. fat.
Body Fat Analyzers can help define that issue. My BMI calculator will let you use stones, kilo, or pounds.
Weight Loss Can help with the fat of gynecomastia, but not the gland. Remaining gland, and sometimes the skin can be residual contour concerns.
Weight loss before surgery is usually much better than weight loss after surgery. Weight loss is a coarse tool,
Plastic Surgery is better reserved for refinement. This is especially true when tissue sagging is a factor. Why lift sagging tissue, lose more weight, and see that tissue sag again from further deflation?
Some doctors will operate on anything that comes through the door, but what do the results really look like? However, Plastic Surgery is not a good jump start tool for weight loss. I have seen disasters from patients from other doctors with deformities from significant weight loss after their surgery. Men tend to put fat on first in the belly and chest bands. We tend to take of those areas last. Early surgery and depending on weight loss to predictably change the body is a nasty gamble.
For a doctor who claims that their contouring can help with someone who is obese or with a global fat contour, try to find before and after pictures from many angles. These photos should not have been after a revision surgery to compensate for secondary problems. You should also try to find out what the patient's weight was before and after. The weight, BMI, and body fat should be comparable to your problem. What normally happens to such compromise cases is that they still look fat, just with slightly smaller breasts.
Weight loss and surgical sculpture is a series of compromises. What suites any one individual will vary. Ideal sequence that I recommend my patients:
- Get to a weight you are comfortable living with.
- Let the skin adjust as much as it will. It can take from 6 to 18 months for skin equilibration after a gastric bypass and major weight loss.
- Consider Tightening Lower Tissues First. There is little sense to lift the chest and then have a tummy tuck, lower the chest result, requiring a revision chest lift.
- Then Address the Chest.
- Use No Surgery Body Shaping Garments as emotional support not to rush the process.
Bouncing redundant flesh also can be a major emotional factor stressing any patient trying to lose weight. That is why I posted
Videos of Compression Garments dealing with gynecomastia and stabilization.
Male Body Fat Distribution tends to put fat on first on the chest and stomach. We take it off those regions last.
Low Nipples Look Strange on a Male Chest. Dealing with
Excess Skin on the Male Chest is a more complex compromise in that there needs to be a place where the excess skin can be removed.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Male Mastopexy Chest Lift for Sagging Tissues