BREAST
SURGERY (MAMMOPLASTY)
Physiologically speaking,
the breast is just a secretory gland and a skin appendage. But in actual fact,
a woman's breasts are not just sexual objects but also constitute an important
part of her self-image. Their status as an erogeneous zone results from their
extreme sensitivity arising from the large network of sensory nerves found all
over the breasts and especially in the nipples.
Unfortunately,
other physiological aspects of the breast make it, on the one hand, highly vulnerable
to undesirable changes and, on the other hand, extremely difficult for creams,
exercise and other agents to have more than a minimal effect on its appearance.Unlike
other physical appendages like the arm or leg, the proper has no significant
mass muscle, nor any system of joints, tendons or ligaments to maintain it in
position. It is principally held in place by the holding ability of the skin
brassiere that surrounds and covers it. The absence of significant muscle mass
explains why exercise cannot increase breast size. And the loss of natural elasticity
explains why, with increasing age, the high, firm breast of youth rapidly descends
and sags.

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Other factors also have
a negative impact--cosmetically speaking--on a woman's breasts. During pregnancy
and lactation, the breast increases in size. But in the period after childbearing,
there is a great loss in the volume and substance of the breast, as well as
a loss of elasticity. Weight reduction is another culprit often responsible
for losses and shifts in the breast substance, skin stretching and stretch marks.
Unfortunately, the first places in which weight is lost include the face and
the breasts. All these factors that affect the size and firmness of breasts
cannot be prevented by underwired bras, lotions or drugs.
Today,
however, surgery can do much to enhance the youthful appearance of breasts,
to give you a fuller bosom, even to restore a breast lost to cancer. In doing
so, however, the cosmetic surgeon must take care not to sacrifice too much of
those aspects of the breast, in particular its sensitivity, that make it much
more than just another functional body organ.
BREAST
AUGMENTATION
Larger
and firmer
this has been perhaps the most common quest, down the ages,
in the area of breast improvement. A variety of methods, ranging from the useless
to the bizarre, have been attempted. Padded bras may have fooled the outside
world but not a woman's sexual partner; nor did it do anything for her own sense
of inadequacy. "Fillers" of abdominal or buttock fat have resulted
in either failure of the filler material to "take" , or have produced
irregular or scarred breasts. And liquid silicone injections, now banned, caused
breasts that were hard, irregular and infected.

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However, all this is now
a matter of memory. Today's surgical procedures to enlarge the breasts are known
to be safe and effective when correctly carried out.They can be used not only
to meet the need of small-breasted women who want fuller, larger breasts but
also to help lessen sagging breasts by filling out the upper breast area (although,
in the case of pronounced sagging, augmentation is best supplemented by another
procedure, mastopexy, to tighten loose tissues and to shift up the nipple which
has drooped too low. See below.
Basic to the procedure
is the insertion of an implant (or prosthesis), a soft envelope made of silicone,
and filled with one of a variety of materials. This is surgically inserted within,
or more precisely under, the breast. There are variations not only in the filler
material, but also in the site of the incision that the surgeon chooses to insert
the implant, as well as where he places it in relation to the breast muscles.
THE
INCISION
The
infra-mammary (under-the breast) incision: This is the most common site for
the surgical incision for breast augmentation. A cut, about two inches long,
is made in the fold beneath the breast and a pocket developed behind the breast
into which the implant is placed. The wound is sutured and generally causes
no problem to the woman. During the healing stage the scar is hidden from view
under the breast fold and, over time, it matures to the point where it becomes
virtually impossible to detect.
The
areolar incision: This is a semi-circular or U-shaped incision that curves around
the outside of the lower half of the areola (the pigmented portion of the nipple).
The incision carries through to the potential space between the breast and the
muscles of the chest. The chief advantages of this incision are that it heals
rapidly and with almost no detectable scar since this is hidden within the darker-pigmented
margin of the areola. On the other hand, since the areola and the nipple itself
are the seat of the greatest erotic sensations, an incision here can often cause
temporary and sometimes permanent loss or reduction of sensitivity. But the
nerve supply in this region is so rich that total or even major loss is all
but impossible.
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Remote-site incisions:
The quest for a natural-looking, scar-free breast was given a fillip with the
greater malleability and versatility of the saline-filled implant. Today, increasing
numbers of surgeons are abandoning the breast fold or the nipple areola as entry
points for the implant, since saline implants enable them to go even farther
afield -as far as the underarm (axilla), the navel or even the pubic region!
The incisions made at these alternative sites are virtually undetectable.
But,
as always, the advantages are tempered by drawbacks, and each candidate must
decide, in consultation with her surgeon, which route is likely to be optimal
in her case.Thus, the distance between the underarm and the breast helps to
minimize the visibility of the scar, but it also makes the operation less direct
and therefore technically less desirable. All the same, surgeons who have developed
expertise in this method believe that, on balance, this is often the proper
route.
Going
via the navel is a simpler, and less traumatic procedure than going via the
pubis, but if previous surgery has been done in the pubic or the lower abdominal
region, or if the breast implantation procedure is going to be combined with,
say, a mini abdominoplasty, the public route may be preferred to the navel.
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The procedure can often
be performed on an outpatient basis, under general anaesthesia, in less than
an hour. An incision is made in the lower ridge of the navel, or in the pubic
region as the case may be, and a pocket created. Through this pocket, the surgeon
introduces a rigid tunneling device, known as the breast tunnelor, in effect
creating a tunnel from the incision site right up to the breast. It is through
this tunnel that the tubing, carrying the implant, is introduced. The implant,
not yet filled with saline, is rolled into a double-leafed cigar shape and attached
to one end of the tubing. To the other end of the tubing is attached a hanging
bag, containing the saline, that will be injected through the tubing, to inflate
the implant, once it is in place. If a problem arises in the course of introducing
the tubing - say, the tunnel is not wide enough to allow the smooth entry of
the implant - the tubing can be withdrawn and the tunnel widened. Smooth-textured
saline implants have been found to glide in more easily and also can be rolled
into a smaller diameter than the more bulky textured implants. The latter type
also occasionally produces a "rippling effect" in some women over
time.
Massage
is introduced in the second week after surgery. The sutures are removed around
10 days after surgery. In three weeks, you can get back to your exercise routine.
Though
surgeons have found the early post-operative results to be good and patient
satisfaction high, the long-term incidence of capsular contracture, muscle paralysis
and infection are not yet known.
THE
PLACEMENT
Whichever type of implant
and whichever type of incision are used, the surgeon - and you - have a choice
of positioning it either above the chest muscles or below them. There are advantages
and drawbacks associated with both.
Positioning
the implant above the chest muscles is a less traumatic procedure since the
surgeon has to cut through less tissue, facilitating healing. This positioning
also lowers the chances of capsular contracture if smooth implants are used,
because the movement of the pectoral muscles provides a kind of massage, helping
tissue stay soft. Because the muscles aren't pushed forward and made more prominent,
athletic women don't have to worry about unsightly ripples across their chest
when their pectorals contract. And if breasts have sagged more than slightly,
implants above the muscles provide more uplift.
If, on the other hand,
an implant is placed under the muscles of the breast, the muscle may prevent
the implant from being noticeable, say, when the arms are raised. It can also
be a boon for very athletic women by reducing 'bounce'. The most important reason
for tucking an implant under the muscles may well be that it decreases the amount
of breast tissue that the implant obscures during mammography.
THE
IMPLANT
The
silicone implant: Medical-grade silicone has long been the preferred material
for breast implants, in large part because it is considered the least likely
of any foreign substance to cause a reaction within the body (one reason it's
used to coat injections and pacemakers). It should not be confused with liquid
silicone which is now known to be dangerous, and the use of which is considered
unethical. The silicone gel implant is enclosed in a silicone capsule.
However, a run of scares
in the United States in the '80s gave rise to certain areas of concern:
Over time, silicone can leak out of its envelope if the implant
ruptures. This does not imply, as it may seem to, that silicone explodes into
the breast. In fact, most ruptures are tiny openings the woman may not even
be aware of. If there's definite evidence that the implant is leaking, it is
better to have it removed, since leaking silicone can pose risks. There are
four methods to determine this: a physical exam, a mammogram, sonography, and
mammoscopy in which a tiny video camera is inserted into the cavity surrounding
the implant, allowing the surgeon to actually see the implant on a screen.
There
have been some reported cases in which some women with silicone implants were
found later to be suffering from debilitating auto-immune disorders such as
scleroderma, raising questions about whether the implants had caused or increased
the risk of developing these disorders.To date, there is no proof that silicone
causes auto-immune reactions and, though the issue remains contentious, the
body of medical opinion is that if there is such a causal link, it is likely
to exist for only a small proportion of silicone-implanted women, most probably
those who are genetically predisposed to develop such auto-immune disorders.
Until a few years ago, another fear that centred around silicone
implants related to breast cancer detection. Conventional mammography techniques
could not see clearly through silicone and this fact somewhat impeded their
ability to detect breast cancer at its earliest, most curable stage. Today,
however, special mammography techniques to reduce implant obstruction are available.
Experts also recommend a displacement technique, in which the implants are manually
pushed back against the chest wall, exposing more of the breast tissue. There
is also growing evidence that supports combining sonography with mammography
to check on silicone-implanted breasts, though not everyone agrees on sonography's
worth.
The
polyurethane implant: The search for an implant that would reduce a persistent
problem in breast augmentation surgery, i.e.capsular contracture, or hardening
of scar tissue around the implant, gave us the polyurethane implant which created
waves during the fag end of the last decade, but also eventually ran into rough
weather. This implant too was made of silicone, but it was coated with a "fuzzy"
layer of polyurethane; this textured surface helped to redistribute pressure
on the implant, cutting the rate of breast hardening from about 25 per cent
to perhaps 2.
However,studies
with rats, though done under extreme test conditions, showed that the polyurethane
foam released a cancer-causing substance as it broke down. Though no studies
conducted under conditions found normally in the human body have produced the
cancer-causing chemical, polyurethane implants have been withdrawn from the
U.S market, following bad press and lawsuits, though the parent company, Bristol-Myers
Squibb, is still financing studies to resolve this issue. (Today, silicone implants
are also available with a roughened or textured finish).
The
saline implant: The outer capsule of this implant is also made of silicone,
but it is filled exclusively with saline. Though more prone to leakage, either
slowly or over time, its advantage is that the saline causes no harm to the
body. However, it can cause a suddenly flattened breast which can be socially
embarrassing and which requires reimplantation.
A
separate advantage of the saline implant is that X-rays can see through saline
more easily than through silicone.
RISKS
AND COMPLICATIONS
The
incidence of major complications in breast augmentation is very low today, but
they do exist.
The primary complication is, what is known as "capsular contracture".
Your body reacts to the implant as it would to any foreign intruder, forming
a thin veil of scar-like capsule around the implant. In some women, a thin capsule
formed, in others, a thicker one.If it is excessively thick, the implant constricts
the capsule and forces it into the shape of a ball, making it firm, at times
uncomfortable and occasionally visible. This complication can affect about 15
percent of patients. The chances of it happening can however be minimised. One
way is by moving and manipulating the implant shortly after surgery, which helps
to maintain a larger pocket and reduces the chances of contracture.
A
similar kind of massage is provided, as mentioned above, by placing the implant
under, rather than over, the muscles of the chest.
Textured
implants, as also mentioned earlier, help to redistribute pressure over the
implant, dramatically reducing the rate of capsular contracture.
If
contracture does result, two corrective options are possible. One is to apply
external pressure over the breast and the capsule with enough force to crack
the scar and allow the breast to become soft and natural again.This can be done
more than once if necessary.
The
second option is to partially open up the surgical incision and to release the
scar tissue that has formed at the margins of the implant. This allows expansion
and softening of the implant
In rare cases, there is repeated capsule formation which cannot be controlled
by manipulation, surgery or medication. In these cases, it is necessary to remove
the implant entirely.
Sometimes, there may be assymetry of the breasts resulting from
differences in the healing process on the two sides. Generally, however, it
is not more pronounced than would be found in normal breasts.
A loss of nipple sensitivity, generally temporary, can sometimes
occur . It is more likely to be permanent (though partial) if the incision has
been made in the areola.
BEFORE
YOU DECIDE
Realize
that, though breast surgery is a well-controlled, well-tolerated surgery, it
is an invasive procedure after all, and that there are always risks associated
with any surgery.
Make sure you go to a competent surgeon. In skilled hands, the
risks are greatly reduced. Half of the complications associated with breast
implants, such as infection, poor placement or miscalculation of the skin's
stretchability, are due to problems with the surgeon, not the product. Choosing
the right surgeon is your toughest task.
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Ask for and read the package insert which comes with every implant. The insert
lists many potential complications associated with surgery and with the product.
You should be sure you have all the information you need to make
a sound decision. This includes:
1) the type of implant to be used and why
2) the size of the selected implant which should be harmonious with the
rest of the body. In particular, there should be an aesthetic balance between
the shoulders, breasts, waist and hips. Also, the extent of enlargement possible
is limited by the amount of skin available, though tissue expanders can today
often get around this problem.
3) the type of anaesthesia that will be used, and whether the surgery
can be performed on a daycare basis or will require an overnight stay in the
hospital.
4) the cost of the surgery
5) whether the doctor will provide post-surgical revisions as needed
either without fee or at a reduced fee.
Finally, weigh the potential risks against the psychological benefits
of implants. While there's no denying risks, neither can you ignore the results
of one recent American survey: The majority of women with breast implants report
that, without a doubt, they'd do it again.
THE POST-OPERATIVE STAGE
You
can be taking food and medication by mouth within three to six hours after surgery.
You can also be out of bed and moving within several hours after the operation.
If the surgery has been done on an outpatient basis, you can return! home four
to six hours after it's over. You'll be prescribed medication to control pain
and infection and sometimes to help you sleep.
Twenty-four
to forty-eight hours after the surgery, the bulky bandages and dressings will
be removed, and a soft bra may be worn. You can shower about 48 hours after
surgery, using soap. Bed rest and limited activity are advised for about 48
hours, with your head elevated on pillows at about a 30-degree incline. For
about two weeks, you'll need to sleep on your back, not on your side or abdomen
since this can disturb the position of the implants.
From about the fourth day
following surgery, you can gradually resume normal activities, with these exceptions:
lifting heavy objects, rapid reaching of the arms overhead, driving an automobile,
engaging in moderate to strenuous exercise.
By
the end of the first week, the sutures will have been removed and fine tape
strips applied across the wound. They stay in place for about a week to 10 days.
Four
weeks after the surgery, you can resume all normal activities and revel in the
dramatic new look of your figure.
THE
BREAST UPLIFT (MASTOPEXY)
Remember
the pencil test? If you can hold a pencil in place under your breasts, you're
probably already worrying about droop and sag. Among the causes: hereditary
drooping, pregnancy and breast-feeding in particular, weight gain which results
in heavy, sagging breasts, repeated weight gain less/loss cycles and aging as
the skin loses its elasticity, especially skin that has been damaged by chronic
exposure to the sun's rays through sunbathing, for example. Also a possible
cause: going without a bra for extended periods of time, which can deny support
to the muscles of the breasts. The overall size of the breasts may remain the
same, but there is a loss of the firmness erectness that kept them youthful-looking.
Non-surgical
options to remedy sag have included "firming" and "toning"
creams, most of which are a cross between a moisturizer and an astringent and
produce a temporary tightening effect by drawing water into surface skin and
causing it to swell. Some also include albumin - egg whites, the same thing
old-time movie stars used to use for instant "face lifts" before going
on camera. The effect created can translate into better tone for an hour or
two - no substitute for a surgical uplift, which is the only way we know at
present to uplift sagging breasts.
Surgery,
known as mastopexy, can give breasts the same kind of lift as that provided
by a well-fitting bra, but this lift is provided by a re-contouring of your
own tissues. The substance of the breast is left untouched; it is only the skin
envelope that is trimmed and tightened. There is a variety of approaches, depending
on the extent of droop, as well as on whether you want some other cosmetic improvement
in the breasts such an increase or a reduction in their size. For a slight droop,
the solution today may involve just the removal of a crescent-shaped piece of
skin above the areola, the pinkish-to brownish tissue surrounding the nipple.
About one-and-a-half centimetres is removed and the skin is sutured, placing
the nipple a bit higher on the breast. The well-hidden scar generally fades
within a few months. You can usually return to work in less than a week, but
should limit physical activity - in particular, stretching, which can widen
or lengthen scars - for up to six weeks. Since the nipple maintains its blood
supply, sensation is usually only temporarily numbed, and the ability to breastfeed
is not normally affected.
For
more severe sagging, a conventional mastopexy is required. Here, the surgeon
makes an incision around the areola, and another from the six o'clock position
on the areola straight down to the fold of the breast, where a horizontal incision
is made. Then a new opening is created for the still-attached nipple and areola
to emerge through, the breast is reshaped, excess skin is trimmed away and all
three incisions are closed. The anchor-like scar sounds worse than it looks,
and it fades within a year to a shade resembling a stretch mark. To keep scars
from becoming raised or thickened, pressure bandages need to be worn over the
incisions 12 hours a day for several months.
In
cases where one of the above procedures is not quite sufficient to restore firmness
and fullness, mastopexy may be combined with a small breast implant. Alternatively,
mastopexy can be combined with a breast reduction procedure (where sagging is
accompanied by heaviness).
In
inexpert hands, breast upliftment surgery can carry the risk of several complications.
But if you've selected your surgeon with care, these complications are less
frequent and less severe. Sometimes one breast may end up looking a little larger
than the other, or the nipples may appear unequal in size, but both problems
are generally surgically correctable. While it is impossible to carry out an
effective breast lift without any scarring, in the majority of cases, the result
is such a cosmetic improvement--over what existed in the first place--that most
women find the scarring acceptable enough.
BREAST
REDUCTION
Breast
implants are so much in the news these days that it's easy to forget that some
women, far from having any use for them, actually have the opposite kind of
problem: over-large, often pendulous breasts that are not only a cosmetic liability
but can also pose other problems. The physical problems include back and/or
breast pain and shoulder discomfort - sometimes severe enough to cause breathing
difficulties. At the practical level, the over-endowed woman is likely to have
problems finding well-fitting undergarments and other items of clothing.
Breast
reduction is also an option for the woman with markedly assymetrical breasts
- one much larger than the other. This calls for a one-sided breast reduction
(though, of course, in some cases, the woman may choose to have the smaller
breast made larger with an implant).
Surgery
to downsize breasts goes back nearly three-quarters of a century. Since the
heaviness is invariably accompanied by sagging to a lesser or greater degree,
as well as a displacement of the nipple to a lower position, the procedure is
aimed at not only reducing the overall volume of the breast, but also shifting
the nipple to a new level that will conform to the newly-created contours of
the breast.
Since
breasts are reduced to a size that's in proportion with the rest of the body,
women who are as close to normal body weight as possible get the best results.
If you want to lose weight, do so before having the operation.
There
are a few risks associated with breast reduction. It's not for women who want
to breastfeed since some of the milk ducts may be severed during the operation.
Milk may be produced but not delivered, causing engorged and cystic breasts.
If breastfeeding is of critical importance to you, the surgery must be postponed
until after the childbearing years.
There
may also be extensive scarring around the nipple and under the breast, resulting
from the several incisions that require to be made. The scars may fade, but
they're permanent. Also, there is a tendency after breast reduction for scars
to stretch. Additionally, some women report a loss of sensation in the nipple
that can last as long as six months.
Where
a large reduction of volume and manipulation has been required, greatly compromising
blood supply to the tissues, it can result in destruction of soft tissue and
its replacement by scar tissue. But with today's level of technical expertise,
it's highly unlikely that there will be a total loss of sensitivity in the nipple
area - a major risk of this surgery in decades past.
On
the whole, aberrations that can arise with this surgery are dealt with surgically
and usually present no permanent problem. Breast reduction is perhaps the most
formidable of all breast surgery, and many surgeons feel it is proper to inform
a woman seeking it that there is a possibility of touch-up surgery being required
a few months later. If you are told about this in advance, you are unlikely
to become upset if at all it is found necessary.
Soon
after surgery, the shape of the breasts is nearly normal, though approximately
a year is needed for them to assume their final appearance.
Post-operative
care: Breast reduction is performed under general anaesthesia. For the first
week after surgery, painkillers are necessary. During this time, the breasts
are firmly bandaged with bulky gauze and elastic dressings. The sutures are
gradually removed and tape strips put in their place.
Following the removal of dressings, you are allowed to shower. After a fortnight,
routine activities are normally resumed. In about two months you'll probably
be back to all activities, including exercise or sports.

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The Breast
"Vanity,
as an impute, has without doubt been of far more benefit to civilization
than modesty has ever been" - WILLIAM
E. WOODWARD
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