I think Bermant's fat flap technique sounds pretty good.
But, for anyone with less resources (like me possibly), I might look into Stem Cell Fat Transfers. I'd like to know more about whether this would be ideal for a male revision surgery. It is said that new blood vessels form using this procedure, and that a vast majority (80-90%) of the fat survives.
The only remaining concern is whether some of the fat calclifies afterward, which would look bad on animation.
It seems promising anyway.
Yes, my fat flaps have worked and I have demonstrated their effectiveness in this particular deformity with before and after surgery pictures and video on how they move.
Have you checked out the piece about stem cells being used in unethical fashion by 60 minutes? Search google for: 21st Century Snake Oil "60 Minutes" Cameras Expose Medical Con Men Who Prey on Dying Victims. That piece was for bizarre use of stem cells. Stem cells are in their early stages of what they may offer. To date I have yet to see one successful use of fat grafts or stem cells to fix a crater defect that looks good on animation or even more stringently feels like fat not firm tissue like residual gland. I have had several patients come to me after attempts elsewhere that they did not like. So, do your checking and investigation carefully before considering an option.
Fat graft use in women is a totally different matter for breast enlargement. Like a breast implant you are trying to duplicate the firm nature of a female breast. Fat grafting that ends up firm is fine for that female breast. For a male with gynecomastia, trading a defect for something that feels like breast tissue (not fat), moves like breast tissue, and bounces like breast tissue is not a good goal unless the patient is trading for a compromise contour that has limitations. Leaving a gynecomastia surgery deformity patient with a breast like mass (read gynecomastia recurrence by surgical method), is truly a limited achievement.
The premise of my above posts in this thread still stands. If a doctor has a working method that functions for male chest deformity disasters from bad surgery, then they should be able to demonstrate such success with more than just one or two still photographs or words alone. Again, the results should reduce the stress of having that deformity such that the individual feel whole again to play sports and live life with their shirt off as a choice. Transparency about the limitations of a technique, how many operations it took to get there, are also important factors to consider especially if there are compromises to be made.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, M.D.Board CertifiedAmerican Board of Plastic Surgery
Member:
American Society of Plastic Surgeons and
American Society of Aesthetic Plastic SurgeonsSpecializing in Gynecomastia and Surgical Sculpture of the Male Chest(804) 748-7737