I think they should have in bold font everywhere on this site. "GYNECOMASTIA CANNOT BE CURED THROUGH DIET AND EXERCISE!!!!!!"
Common misbelief many individuals have. It's quite sad to here someone say to you: "Well, if you would have lost some weight BEFORE surgery, maybe it wouldn't be so bad." It doesn't work like that....because not only is an individual already affected by the gynecomastia, now someone has to criticize their weight?
Sad society we live in people....sad society indeed.
-Oleska-
Actually you are right and wrong.
Weight Loss can help with the fat component of Gynecomastia. Residual gland and loose skin may be factors, but that is still a major difference.
The main issue here is that
Plastic Surgery is not an alternative to losing weight. Contouring someone with excessive global body fat will result in a compromise result: breasts that are smaller, but still present on a body that still looks overweight deformed with global fat. In fact a morbidly obese or heavier patient is at major risk living with the excess fat. That is why the term for those with a
BMI of 40 - 49.9 is called morbid. These patients are also at much higher risk for elective surgery. Losing weight for those at such risk can extend their lives and make surgery safer.
I work with many patients who lose weight. The common theme is that they tell me they feel much better with the weight gone than before. The problem with weight loss, is that you cannot pick where the fat comes from and the belly and chest are the last for the fat to come from. In addition
After Weight Loss loose skin can be a significant deforming factor.
- Here is one Male Mastopexy Chest Lift Patient who lost 60 pounds. Yes, there was skin, residual fat, and gland, but he was so much happier after losing the weight. The plastic surgery could then act as a tool of refinement.
- Here is another Male Chest Lift with residual issues after he lost 40 - 50 pounds.
- Here is yet another Male Chest Lift on a patient after a 75 pound weight loss. Again, the coarse tool was the weight loss, the surgery was then for refinement.
Each of these, and many many others I have seen had one common thread, they all had major reductions in their breast size, global body fat, and felt better about their bodies after losing the weight.
I have even seen patients who had a trivial gland component. After their weight loss, they had no loose skin, no significant gland, and they came back just to show me how good their chest looked -
without surgery! Unfortunately, gland is often a significant component and skin does not always adapt to the body's smaller size.
So weight loss can and does make a significant difference!
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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