I've been overweight or fat almost my entire life, and even as a kid and in middle school I recall having a 'fat chest'. Over the last couple of years (I'm 29 now) I've really gotten a handle on my lifestyle and made permanent, healthy changes. At my heaviest I was 287, and I'm down to 187 right now. The before/after pictures here are from 245 and 187 respectively - unfortunately I don't have the *really* fat pictures
My chest has gotten smaller as you can see, but I would have thought it would be even smaller at this point. I'm at about 19.5% bodyfat, so I still have at least 15 pounds of pure fat to lose and I haven't started a weight training program yet (just pushups, cardio, squats, bodyweight exercises mostly)
Do you think this is mostly just a case of loose skin + remaining fat or could I have the gyne? :O
Congratulations on your weight loss! Does it not feel much better with that weight off? 100 pounds is quite an achievement. 15 or more pounds of additional weight loss after surgery can be a factor after surgery compromising the result.
After Major Weight Loss skin and supporting tissues retract only so much leaving sagging and drooping. These are usually global factors affecting most regions of the body. For men, the sagging chest is often the biggest concern. However, there are often issues of the stomach, thighs, buttocks, arms, and more. While a
Tummy Tuck Abdominoplasty can help with the front, a
Lower Body Lift helps deal with the stomach, thighs, and buttock sagging.
Low Nipples Do Not Look Good on the Male Chest.
Excess Skin of the Male Chest with Gynecomastia comes in various degrees. Here are my
Standard Pictures for Evaluating Extra Skin on the Male Chest.
Weight loss before surgery is usually much better than weight loss after surgery. Weight loss is a coarse tool, Plastic Surgery is better reserved for refinement. This is especially true when tissue sagging is a factor. Why lift sagging tissue, lose more weight, and see that tissue sag again from further deflation?
Weight loss and surgical sculpture is a series of compromises. What suites any one individual will vary. Ideal sequence that I recommend my patients:
- Get to a weight you are comfortable living with.
- Let the skin adjust as much as it will. It can take from 6 to 18 months for skin equilibration after a gastric bypass and major weight loss.
- Consider Tightening Lower Tissues First. There is little sense to lift the chest and then have a tummy tuck, lower the chest result, requiring a revision chest lift.
- Then Address the Chest.
- Use No Surgery Body Shaping Garments as emotional support not to rush the process.
Bouncing redundant flesh also can be a major emotional factor stressing any patient trying to lose weight. That is why I posted
Videos of Compression Garments dealing with gynecomastia and stabilization.
For some patients, my
small incision skin reduction chest lift is an option. This eliminates the unnatural very obvious unnatural vertical scar. For smaller problems, I have evolved my
Internal Lift Male Mastopexy Surgery that has even smaller scars. My internal lift is not suitable when the excess skin is a major contributing factor for the deformity. A
Male Donut Mastopexy when pushed too far will leave a star burst deformity that detracts from the result. That is why picking your surgeon carefully can be so important.
Yes, scars are a compromise. We need some place to remove the excess skin. The shorter the scars, the less skin that is removed.
Options are best explored during an evaluation.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
Learn More About Male Mastopexy Chest Lift for Sagging Tissues