Posts Tagged ‘peri-areola’

Cosmetic Surgery Statistics for 2008

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Here are some interesting facts as reported by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. I am a member of this society.

From 2007-2008, there was over a 12 percent decrease in the total number of cosmetic procedures. Surgical procedures decreased by 15 percent, and nonsurgical procedures decreased by almost 12 percent.

The top five surgical cosmetic procedures in 2008 were: breast augmentation (355,671 procedures); liposuction (341,144 procedures); eyelid surgery (195,104 procedures); rhinoplasty or nose reshaping (152,434 procedures); and abdominoplasty or tummy tuck (147,392 procedures).

The top five nonsurgical cosmetic procedures in 2008 were: Botox injection (2,464,123 procedures); laser hair removal (1,280,964 procedures); hyaluronic acid (1,262,848 procedures); chemical peel (591,808 procedures); and laser skin resurfacing (570,880 procedures).

Why I prefer the peri-areola incision choice

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

1. The scar is usually better. It is camouflaged at the brown to regular skin color junction. It hardly ever becomes keloid. I have seen the incision under the breast get keloid more often. The incision under the breast is in plain skin and therefore shows more clearly – at least until it fully matures, hopefully into an inconspicuous line.
2. Access is better. I can easily see in all directions. I can control the procedure more accurately. Sometimes if using the incision under the breast it is hard to see the very top of the breast pocket – especially if there is a prominent rib in the way. This could obscure a bleeding point. I can get a consistently safer outcome with the areola incision.
3. Less bottoming out. The support structures of the fold under the breast are not harmed with the areola incision, and the implant seems to maintain its position better. Often, if the incision is under the breast the implant might descend too low over the next year or two, perhaps because the fold itself is weakened. This gives the breast an unsatisfactory shape, with not enough breast above the nipple and too much below. The nipple might start to point upwards. This does not look good and may need surgical correction.
4. Shape is much better. It is my opinion that if the areola incision is used, the bottom of the implant rests on the breast between the nipple and the crease and is tilted slightly forward, whereas it rests directly on the fold under the breast if the incision is under the breast and the implant is more vertical in orientation. Long term shape is much better with the areola incision as the implant comes down properly as the breast ages. If the incision is under the breast the implant does not come down so readily and often starts to create a bulge in the upper breast area as the breast ages over the years and comes down with gravity. This gives the breast a long look which is not good.