Hello, I've had Gynecomastia since twelve years old. I'm almost 24 now and and i've been heavy from 9 years old to 21. Since then I've lost close to 100 pounds. I'm now considering Gynecomastia surgery for my situation. I've been to a few surgeons here in town and in the batch of uploaded pics in the think below I've provided a a proposed operation from a surgeon who does about 50 a year. I would appreciate all thoughts and advice on my situation, also what your thoughts are on the surgeon's way of going about my surgery. He and a number of other have recommended skin excision, mostly on the left breast. Thank you for your time. If there are certain surgeons that have a different approach I would like to know!
Congratulations on all of that weight loss. 100 pounds is quite an achievement.
Vertical component skin reduction looks terrible, in my opinion, on male chest especially on animation. Check before after pictures
of men, flexing muscle views, bending over views, and videos. Does the doctor have the bending over views of the proposed surgery on male patients? Check this post that has resources to better understand the issues at hand here.
https://www.gynecomastia.org/smf/index.php?topic=21099.msg143265;topicseen#msg143265This is compromise surgery and understanding the trade off issues of loose skin and scars is critical education before having surgery.
The other issue is the loose tissue of the belly. If both are eventually to be addressed, the stomach is better done first. Otherwise lift the chest, then do the belly, a tummy tuck can lower the chest again. Then you get to have a revision for the chest? Not the best order of doing things. Here are resources discussing these concepts:
https://www.gynecomastia.org/smf/index.php?topic=22279.msg149750;topicseen#msg149750So back on point, you are looking for what a doctor's techniques look like as far as leaving loose skin and scar compromise. That does mean what it looks like from different angles, and how it reacts to gravity (bending) and bouncing. That is why checking videos is even better for that evaluation. Beyond that then you need to understand what path a patient needed to take to get there. How much bruising, swelling, pain, return to activity and so forth.
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