I'm 28. I was always overweight growing up, always about as many stone as I was years old. I got to 20.5 stone by the age of 23, then lost 10 stone over 3 years and have kept it off since then.
My abdominoplasty was done by Mrs Kat, who is also based in Birmingham. My stomach area was the worst, but I'm definitely quite sensitive about the chest as well. I have slightly loose skin everywhere, but I think that my torso had the worst psychological effect on me. I can live with it everywhere else.
Both Mrs Kat and another surgeon have suggested another idea that would remove skin from my chest without leaving a scar. They suggested cutting my nipple entirely out, then cutting out another larger circle, then sewing the nipple back into that larger hole. It would not remove very much skin, and would involve quite a bit of trauma to my nipples! It was my idea to slice across the top and pull everything up. To me that would preserve the important stuff. Plus the scar would run across the top of my peck, along the crease that starts at the armpit, and I don't think it would look terrible. If it did I would consider getting it covered up with a tattoo. My abdominoplasty was straight forward. I'm a bit anxious about this because my intuition of what I want goes against what every surgeon has recommended so far.
I'm really swaying between Dr Levick's standard surgery, and having the skin removal and a big scar. I suspect that I won't be happy with the loose skin (and low nipples) of his standard surgery, but I might be happy enough to live with it. Scarring across the top of the chest might prevent me from swimming and doing other topless activities, which would be a bit of a bummer.
The NHS have not offered anything. I went to my GP about 2.5 years ago and sought a referral. They said that I did not qualify although they never gave me any reasons. I think it was because they believed that it was not causing me depression or was debilitating. I run marathons and do a lot of other intense sports (that is how I lost the weight), so I can imagine that they saw me as low priority. I have been told that due to budget cuts, purely cosmetic surgeries like this are almost unheard of on the NHS now. They will still refer you to the relevant NHS Trust, but 99% of the time the answer will be no.
Dr Levick told me that he had done the surgery I requested on others, but they were major, major weight loss patients (e.g. 20 stone lost), where their nipples were down to their belly button and there was no other way. Mine is really just like little flaps of extra skin, enough to pull my nipples down. I feel a bit narcissistic being affected by it really.