Just wondered what the male aerola should look like, should it be flat on a man with only the nipple being raised.
I ask this because since my operation last year I still feel when the nipples are warm and not stimulated they look raised from the pectoral area kinda flabby looking. I just expected that after having all the gynecomastia removed the aerola would lie flat against the chest with only the nipple itself being raised. When the nipple is hard the chest appears tighter and more toned looking much like before surgery.
I was told by my surgeon all the gland/Gynecomastia was removed if that's the case why do the aerola's still appear raised when warm, but flatter when stimulated.
So I guess what Im really asking is on a man should the aerola be flat or are all mens aerola's raised slightly.
Hope this makes sense and you can shed some light on the subject for me. I just wonder wether I have unrealistic expectations of how the male chest should look an its more in my head now than anything.
Thanks for your help.
The ideal nipple should be a continuation of the contour of the surrounding chest. For a flat chest, the nipple should be flat. When the chest has a pointed shape such as in a fat chest, a flat nipple on a cone shape breast looks frankly bizarre. Flattening the nipple alone in such problems is not a good looking solution, the entire chest contour needs to be addressed.
The shape of the areola also depends on the thin muscle just under it. When stimulated, a residual puffy nipple deformity is hidden. When this muscle is relaxed, a contour problem again shows through.
Another factor that can bring out this deformity is flexing the chest muscles, activity, and at play. A firmer scar, residual gland, or firm fat all can compress differently than surrounding fat.
Check out this post on residual puffy nipple complication deformity that addresses both issues on my web pages:
https://www.gynecomastia.org/smf/index.php?topic=21491.msg145526;topicseen#msg145526Beyond that there should be no scar step off from surgery.
So the ideal nipple should be a continuation of the contour of the remaining chest both in a relaxed state and when stimulated, both at rest and when active. That is why seeing pictures of the chest relaxed, tense, arms up, from different angles (both oblique and reverse oblique) and close up are so critical in evaluating a contour problem and surgical solution.
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