To all the doctors here on this site about what percentage is direct used ?
I have read here that some doctors use a special canula to remove the gland
but you can see how alot of us here are skeptical ? I would prefer that a doctor
do the direct incision but it not the technique but the end result that counts.
100%
I prefer one small incision for each side and the nipple areola chest skin junction is a great place to fool the eye and hide a scar. This incision now is typically under 1.6 cm (0.6 inch) for my primary cases and much better in my opinion than needing remote incisions that do not hide well except in photographs taken with the arms down. This becomes even more relevant when that "special" liposuction cannula does not "remove the gland" and the patient ends up with both the remote and areola incisions.
I have seen so many patients unhappy with liposuction techniques that I have been working on publishing a subset of a collection of over 500 (just over the past few years) requests for help after liposuction done elsewhere. Complaints have been for Puffy Nipple Complication deformity, scarring between the remote incision and the region needing sculpture, the actual scars of the remote sites, and many other issues.
You are right on target looking for the end result, but the question is what result? The result seen in one or two still pictures with the arms at the sides? For my patients, I am looking for results that look good living life, playing sports, swimming, flexing muscles, and being not embarrassed with their chest exposed. That is why I evolved my standard pictures to include arms up overhead, the view from around the body, and views relaxing / flexing muscles. Other views become critical for revision surgery and loose skin issues. More critical for evaluating of results are the movies before and after surgery. We may not walk around with our arms up over our head, but it is hard to play volleyball or basket ball without exposing our sides with the arms up. If the results are good, then they should be able to be so documented.
In evaluating so many unhappy patients done elsewhere and revising them, I do not consider the sharp cutting cannula effective for gynecomastia gland and have seen unhappy patients from most of the "special" cannula techniques even when the surgery was done by the designing doctor themselves. I have yet to see satisfactory proof that these cannula work removing actual gland. When scar gland tissue is compressed, it does not compress like fat, and that is why I have been able to revise patients by removing this residual gland / scar and replacing it with nearby fat. Such compression issues become more evident on animation, flexing, and other activities which is why I added those views and videos to my documentation of results. I have documented and published such contour issues in the past and continue to publish more.
So in understanding just what a technique offers, its scars, you need to be able to evaluate how the tissue looks when moving, flexing, and living life. The scar is not just the access point from the surface, but extends throughout the entire sculpted region. The best surgery should be transparent and not show that it has been there. Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, M.D.