I for a consult this week to a certified Plastic Surgeon in my area. This surgeon was recommended to me by my primary care physician. I have asymmetrical gynecomastia with the left side larger than the right. Said could do a surgery but for good results would have to my an incision where my breast crest at the bottom and pull the skin down to tighten. Also would have to cut a new hole for my aerola. With the aerola being detached and put in a new place it would lose coloring and may have to get it tattooed for coloring. I am not too comfortable with that type of procedure and was wondering if there was another way to have the skin tighten back against the chest wall with out concaveing in and with minimal scarring. Can it be done through a peri-aerola incision?? I am posting some pics and woudl welcome some feedback
Skin reduction is a good compromise for the patient with a great deal of sagging skin. For a patient with normal skin elasticity, skin reduction is not normally needed during breast reduction surgery. Elastic skin can really shrink quite well on its own and skin reduction scars then are normally not needed.
How well skin shrinks after removing mass behind it can vary greatly as shown by the two balloon examples on that link. For my techniques, most of the change occurs in the operating room. There can be some further shrinkage over time after surgery. Building muscle mass can be one way of filling up a loose skin envelope. However, it is very difficult to maintain such large muscles throughout our lives.
Excess Skin of the Male Chest with Gynecomastia comes in various degrees. Here are my
Standard Pictures for Evaluating Extra Skin on the Male Chest.
If there is a global fat component, surgery will not make someone who has a thicker layer of fat around the body look like they do not have that fat. Early surgery is a bad compromise. Breasts can be made smaller, but there will still be breasts. Skin reduction surgery is even more of a factor. Tighten the skin, lose weight, and the tissues will be loose again. That is why I suggest my patients first get to a weight that they are happy with. Weight loss is a coarse tool, surgery is better reserved for refinement.
Options are best explored during an evaluation with an experienced surgeon who can demonstrate their skills with this compromise issue of extra skin of the male chest sculpture.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Male Mastopexy Chest Lift for Sagging Tissues