You have subtle Puffy Nipple Gynecomastia. This is a contour problem and when a man has female like breasts, even if they are small like a woman's early developing breasts, it is gynecomastia just like their early breasts are still breasts. The Anatomy of Puffy Nipple Gynecomastia will consist of fat, gland, and skin.
Your BMI calculation is in the normal range, but there may be a fat component better demonstrated with a Body Fat Analyzer. With weight loss, you will not get rid of the residual gland component, but the fat component can improve. The issue is that you cannot pick where the fat comes from with weight loss. I work with many Bodybuilders with Gynecomastia. A common complaint is that as they built up their muscle, what sits on top of the muscle gets pushed out further.
Suction does not manage the gland of gynecomastia. I have seen just so many patients unhappy after other surgeons' claims that liposuction will manage the gland of their gynecomastia. It can dig a hole in the fat leaving a Puffy Nipple Complication. The residual gland left behind in particular does not look good on animation. In evaluating just how effective a surgeon's claim for their technique working is to see how the contour looks with muscles flexing, arms up over head, or even better movies.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Gynecomastia and Male Breast Reduction
Thanks for your input Dr Bermant. I think you hit the nail on the head with what i have bolded out. I feel like as my muscles have developted they have essentially pushed out the fat/gland tissue.
I would like to continue down the exercise route, i understand you can't "spot reduce fat", ie: pick where the fat comes from, and you lose fat all over as you decrease your BMI.
When you say it possibly can't be solved with suction, how is the gland stuff removed, is it cut out?
I could make a short video clip for further analysis, basically it dissapears as i raise my hands above my head.
Thanks.
Some doctors prefer to start with liposuction, which is great for fat. The problem is that all liposuction techniques: sharp cutting cannula, ultrasonic, vasor, power assisted all preferentially target fat instead of gland. I have tried many types of cannula and even though I use a keel tipped sharp cannula as one of the elements of my liposuction, it does not get the gland. This is even the case when the cannula is brand new. It is in the literature that liposuction supposedly takes care of gynecomastia. The problem is that I have seen just so many unhappy patients after surgery by other doctors. The patients complained that the contour did not look good, especially on animation. I have seen so many of these unhappy patients that I even built a page for
Puffy Nipple Complication After Gynecomastia Surgery that demonstrates some of the many variations I have seen.
That is why years ago I decided to reverse the order of the surgery and thus developed my
Dynamic Technique about which I have published and lectured. The hallmark of this methodology is
Targeting the Gland first, and then using my artist's pallet of different surgical tools to sculpt the remaining tissues:
You can follow the methodology by checking out each component in the links above. So yes, I start by cutting the gland out and then have the remaining tissues as a resource to rebuild the contour. When starting with the liposuction first, if you end up with a gland contour problem, then those resources are not available and your options become leave the gland or create a crater. Leaving the gland behind would not be an issue if it were not for how the firm gland moves and compresses differently than the fat. That is why it does not look as good and many who claim "success" with liposuction only techniques seem to feature only a few select pictures showing their results. I have actually seen unhappy patients from other doctors who had results posted on that Surgeons' website as examples of a "good result." My philosophy has been make the chest look good for my patients while living life, playing basketball, swimming, and with their shirts off.
When contour problems disappear with arms up over head, there may be a skin component of the contour. Slouching bringing shoulders forward tend to loosen the skin, while lifting up over head and bringing shoulders back will tighten the skin. I evolved these
Standard Pictures for Loose Skin on the Male Chest to show this issue having gravity help show the problem. However, loose skin is one of the hardest things to document with pictures / video. The in office exam is so much more effective when extra skin is a factor, especially if it does not show on the images.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Gynecomastia and Male Breast Reduction