Author Topic: chest x ray  (Read 4890 times)

Offline acitalia

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Hey everybody,


I had my gyno removed june 2009 lipo & gland. One of the best moves I have ever made.

   I have since hurT my chest playing football, they want to do a chest x ray, will they be able to tell on the x ray that I have had gyno
surgery ?  I am not really wanting even my family doc to find out when he gets the results from the chest x ray.

Please help


Thanks,

Offline Dr. Elliot Jacobs

  • Elliot W. Jacobs, MD, FACS
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    • Gynecomastia Surgery
Short answer:  no.

Xrays look at bones -- not soft tissues.  There will be no evidence of any chest surgery on your Xray -- that is unless the surgeon used metal clips to stop bleeding -- which is virtually unheard of.

Dr Jacobs
Dr. Jacobs 
Certified: American Board of Plastic Surgery
Fellow: American College of Surgeons
Practice sub-specialty in Gynecomastia Surgery
4800 North Federal Highway
Boca Raton, Florida 33431
561  367 9101
Email:  dr.j@elliotjacobsmd.com
Website:  http://www.gynecomastiasurgery.com
Website:  http://www.gynecomastianewyork.c

Offline Miguel Delgado MD

  • Miguel A. Delgado,MD,FACS
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  • Miguel Delgado,MD
    • Gynecomastia Specialist San Francisco, California
No worries.  The only way they could tell is a trained eye looks at your incisions and put 2 and 2 together.  Highly unlikely.  X-rays look at bones.
Miguel A Delgado,MD,FACS
American Society of Plastic Surgeons
American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons
Fellow,American College of Surgeons
450 Sutter, San Francisco, California
info@Dr-Delgado.com
www.Dr-Delgado.com
www.Gynecomastia-Specialist.com

DrBermant

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Hey everybody,


I had my gyno removed june 2009 lipo & gland. One of the best moves I have ever made.

   I have since hurT my chest playing football, they want to do a chest x ray, will they be able to tell on the x ray that I have had gyno
surgery ?  I am not really wanting even my family doc to find out when he gets the results from the chest x ray.

Please help


Thanks,


It depends on the type of Xray being done. Xrays show radiodense tissues, that means tissues that do not let the radiation pass as well. Normal chest xrays tend to show mostly bone and some lung detail. Gland and scar tissue can show up but tend to get lost in the clutter. Xrays designed for the breast, mammograms, will show gland and scar tissue, but it can be difficult to see that surgery has been done unless it is one of the bad complications that come to me unhappy after surgery by other doctors. More revealing would be CAT scans which also use xrays and a computer where you can dial into the tissue density needed to show the structure. I have used CAT scans to see disrupted muscles, scar tissues, and residual gland when there fortuitously (I do not order that test, but will use it when another doctor orders it for something else). MRIs use a different spectrum of the radio waves, magnetic fields to analyze  tissues. Muscle, gland, scar tissue all show up well on this test but it would take a trained eye to see if surgery was done, again except if there was a disfiguring deformity after surgery. That is something I have ordered to understand the deformity made in muscles by surgeons from complications of their gynecomastia surgery.

Although I did not order them, I had the opportunity yesterday to evaluate a series of mammograms and MRIs ordered after gynecomastia surgery done elsewhere. The mammograms, one before and the second after the first surgery show the damage to the muscle done by the first surgeon in one state. He injured the muscle so bad that a section was left paralyzed. It also showed the residual gland left by the liposuction only technique, but you cannot distinguish gland from scar tissue. So on that series of mammograms, yes the radiologist were able to say that something had been done to injure tissue. And yes, the mammograms are xrays. The MRIs were done after revision surgery done in another state. The MRIs will show scar tissue, residual gland, and deformed muscle. I could see the deformed muscle but do not feel comfortable committing that the tissue I saw was denser scar tissue or what, such interpretation I leave to a radiologist and I did not bring that patient's films to a radiologist to get that section interpreted. That is what I do when I think I have a chance of reconstruction and am trying to use whatever I have at hand to better understand the anatomy or if surgery should be done. I did not use the MRIs to make that call yesterday, that was done by clinical exam and documenting tissue moving on animation and videos. That patient had been over liposuctioned, the crater defect so extensive, that I did not have a reasonable option to rebuild his chest. On cases in the past, such a visit to radiologist permitted me to understand the disrupted muscle left by that other doctor and then I was able to perform a reconstruction of the chest wall by repairing the damaged muscle, removing the scar adhesion, and using local resources to rebuild the chest.

So, in answer to your question, it depends on the specific type of test ordered and how cleaver the radiologist / viewer are who are looking at the test. It is highly unlikely that a regular chest xray will show anything, but a more refined use of radiation such as mammogram, CT scan, or MRI (different spectrum but still radiation) may show evidence of surgery to someone looking for it.

Hope this helps,

Michael Bermant, M.D.
Board Certified
American Board of Plastic Surgery
Member: American Society of Plastic Surgeons and American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons
Specializing in Gynecomastia and Surgical Sculpture of the Male Chest
(804) 748-7737
« Last Edit: January 30, 2011, 05:30:01 PM by DrBermant »

Offline deanwrx

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Here are the mammograms mentioned above. Before and after surgery with first doc. (triangle marker is next to areola) You can clearly see the atrophy of the muscle. Choose your surgeon very carefully.

I'll be posting detailed reviews, with before/after pics of first and second surgeries. There are some extremely important lessons to be learned from my experience - for patients and surgeons. I hope no one has to experience what i have.

Chest before any surgery: Date: 07/13/2006


Chest after first surgery: Date: 02/01/2008


 

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