Ok so I just had my surgery two weeks ago. I feel like a million bucks and my chest is looking pretty good. However my surgeon opted to stick with just liposuction for surgery when they had me in the operating room.
Am I at risk of reoccurance? Its just that it seems like liposuction with gland removal seems to be the favored technique by most surgeons. My surgeon informed me that if he felt it was necessary he would do the same. However when i woke up I had only had liposuction.
Will my tissue regrow. For the doctors on the board, why is it that you think my surgeon made this choice? I guess what i really want to know is am i doomed to have to go in for another surgery down the line to "have it done right?"
What I am the most hopeful of is that there is at least some doctors or members on the board have had favorable results with liposuction. Please let me know your out there. Somebody that is in the same boat as me.
I am happy with my results just wondering if I should be worried down the line.
Liposuction is a great tool for fat based gynecomastia surgery. Here are examples of some of the many patients I have seen who came to me complaining of:
all after other surgeons' work. I have seen many many other patients unhappy after contouring from other doctors who claimed that their liposuction alone was enough to manage the gynecomastia. In the
Anatomy of Gynecomastia there are fingers of gland that run through the fat. Unfortunately all forms of liposuction, Vaser, Ultrasonic, Power Assisted, "Smart," sharp cutting cannula all preferentially will target the softer fat first. Suck out the fat first, and the fingers of gland condense behind.
On this page of Puffy Nipple Anatomy, hold your screen cursor over the link "
Remaining Gland after Gynecomastia Surgery" to see residual gland that can be left behind when working using liposuction from a remote site that depicts on common problem I have seen in such cases. Then look at the gland / scar tissue complex in each of the revision cases I have posted to see what I mean.
With my
Dynamic Technique I prefer to target the gland first and then contour the remaining defect. By waiting until I find out how much gland should come out first, remaining fat can be contouring tool. Even subtle
Puffy Nipple Gynecomastia can detract from a cut look on the male chest.
When I start the
Tumescent Infiltration Anesthesia and find the gland component trivial, I will only use liposuction to contour the chest. This results in a tiny scar hidden at the edge of the areola. Unfortunately, I find significant gland contributions in so many of my patients. You can see some of the
Gland Component of Gynecomastia I removed from typical cases.
If the final contour is not being hidden by swelling (which can hide deformities), looks good with the areola muscles relaxed
Puffy Nipple Deformity Can Be Hidden by Areola Muscle Stimulation, and looks good on animation (arms up, muscles tensing, and in motion), then that is a good result. Fine male chest sculpture should look good from all angles and while exposed living lift, not just in a few select pictures taken in a cold room the angle of view seems to change based on what looked better on that patient.
Unfortunately, gynecomastia surgery does not prevent recurrence. Shreds of gland remain behind with any technique. If there are any
Medical Problems Causing Gynecomastia or
Medications That Cause Male Breast Growth, these remaining gland cells will grow. That is why it is so critical to work on stable conditions. I also like to target gland first so that there is less tissue for any hormonal imbalance to influence.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Revision Gynecomastia and Chest Surgery