I understand Dr. Bermant will remove the gland first than smooth out the area of fat to avoid the crater deformation. Sometimes he will also put fat flaps over the area to support the nipple area when the arms ar raised.
My question is how to the rest of the surgeons who don't remove the gland first prevent this type of thing from happening?
Basically will it require at last some extra liposuction after the gland is removed to smooth out this possible crater effect? My understanding is that the gland removal creates a hole in the fat and the extra liposuction will remove the fat( basically leveling out that hole that creates the crater effect) ?
Please let me know how a surgeon can prevent a crater effect when the gland is removed ?
Thanks
My Dynamic Technique is outlined in great detail on my site and extends way beyond what you describe targeting gland first so that you do not end up with problems like the Puffy Nipple Complication after gynecomastia surgery. When there is enough fat overall, then my Fat Flaps are not needed. When the gland is a major component, then the Fat Flaps become a powerful step to target gland first.
Now some doctors will claim they do not need to target gland first or that their method gets rid of the gland. However, there never seem to be more than one or two pictures to evaluate before / after surgery as proof of the method. It certainly is one explanation for the many patients I have seen from around the world who come to me complaining of contour deformity after surgery done elsewhere. No the gland is not cancer, but it certainly does not compress like fat does. That is why when flexing muscles or lifting arms up overhead can be revealing to just how good a result is after surgery or the degree of the problem before.
To really evaluate if a method works, you need to see how the contour looks from many different directions. Look for at least my Standard Pictures for Gynecomastia Surgery. There should be at least Frontal, Frontal with arms up overhead, Frontal arms on hips muscles relaxed and then flexed. Left and right oblique images, Left and Right Side images, puffy nipples are even more critically evaluated with reverse oblique pictures.
To really evaluate after revision surgery these flexed views are more critical such as flexing and relaxed oblique and side pictures.
Movies are even more critical of contour issues. One unhappy patient just thanked me for putting his story up demonstrating how bad his results looked like after revision surgery done elsewhere. His craters were fixed by removing just about all of the fat along his chest. Something that looked OK from the still picture view point. But when looking at himself in the mirror each morning the patient was embarrassed about himself in how his chest looked as he moved it. The videos are quite a story watching. The patient had come to me to learn what I had to offer, but there was nothing left to use. The crater defect was too large. Instead I worked hard to help him through a difficult emotional healing even though I did not create the defect. Here is a recent response:
This is amazing. Thank you for doing this. I feel like i finally get to tell my story.
The bottom line is not how the doctor gets there, it is how the results look in
real life, not just one or two views showing how "great" a method is for contouring. The result should look good playing sports, swimming, and enjoying life with shirt off and not being embarrassed about the body.
Look for that documentation and proof before picking your surgeon. That is one of the best methods of preventing a crater defect, seeing what that doctor's methods really look like beyond the one or two still pictures.
To show to a degree what I am referring to here are 2 pictures from that example I was talking about:
Extended Crater Defect Relaxed
Extended Crater Defect Flexed
Unfortunately these are only still pictures. The videos are much better demonstrating how still pictures alone do not tell the entire story.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, M.D.