To answer your original question, yes, I do think you are being unreasonable.
You paid for an operation and for a surgeon to do his best. No surgeon can guarantee perfect results or 100% satisfaction on the part of the patient.
I have had patients who had a 98% excellent result -- and instead of looking at the great improvement they had, they instead focused on the missing 2% and sought absolute perfection in their surgical results. Just think -- did you achieve 100% on every exam you had in high school? Well surgery is a lot harder and more unpredictable -- human tissue just isn't moldable and able to be sculpted to perfection.
As I previously stated, there is no perfection in this world. Accept your results and move on with your life. If you seek another surgeon (and pay for another operation), you may regret it.
'Nuf said.
Dr Jacobs
Hey Dr. Jacobs,
Thanks for the blunt response. For the most part I agree but just to get my thoughts out and maybe clarify what I was saying I think 2 points are relevant as a response
1. I'm sure part of it comes from expectation vs results. If someone showed me my current results before my surgery happened then I still would have gotten it done but I would have been expecting this rather than expecting better so I would have been more easily able to accept it vs hoping for me
2. In my case at least I fully agree it would be unreasonable to always expect 100% on the first try, that's not what I was saying. It was more like "OK, we didn't get 100% the first try and that's fine. We even said we would rather be a little overly cautious to avoid an indentation and whatnot specifically because we always have the option of going back in and taking more out if necessary" and now that option seems to have been taken away. So I definitely wasn't saying I expected perfection right away, but yes I was expecting to be closer to an ideal result even if it meant going in a 2nd time to get there.
I do realize though that this comes with consequences, so I just wish he took a bit more out the first time since it seems a 2nd surgery isn't really an option anyway (certainly not going to pay another $5400, and my surgeon didn't seem to be OK with going in again anyway).
Edit: Oh, lastly Dr. Jacobs while I have you here, I was wondering 1 other thing....there is some clear scar tissue remaining on the right side a little bit to the right of the nipple and below. I don't think this is affecting how it looks much but I can feel it and my doctor didn't want to risk doing another kenalog injection. With scar tissue is it the case that with enough ample massaging over time it will eventually break up or is it possible that even if I keep rubbing/massaging it hard daily it still would never go away? Not a big deal but curious.
Thanks again