-
Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Feb 2023Norm values for patient reported outcomes, that is knowledge about how the general population of women rate their breast-related satisfaction and quality of life, are...
BACKGROUND
Norm values for patient reported outcomes, that is knowledge about how the general population of women rate their breast-related satisfaction and quality of life, are necessary to interpret the meaning of scores. The aims of this study were to create Swedish normative values for the BREAST-Q reduction/mastopexy module and to describe what healthy women are most satisfied/dissatisfied with regarding their breasts.
METHODS
A random sample of 400 women aged 18-80, currently living in Region Västra Götaland, were sent BREAST-Q reduction/mastopexy. Descriptive data are presented.
RESULTS
One hundred and forty-six women answered the questionnaire (36.5%). Mean total scores ranged from 48 to 78. No clear changes in scores could be seen with age and women with a high BMI seem to be less satisfied with their breasts. The participants were most satisfied with the appearance of the breasts when dressed, the appearance in the mirror dressed, the shape of the breasts with bra, and symmetry of size and most dissatisfied with appearance in the mirror naked and the shape of the breasts without a bra. Thirty to forty-five per cent of healthy women never or almost never feel sexually attractive. Among physical symptoms often described in breast hypertrophy, the most common among healthy women were lack of energy, pain in the neck, arms and shoulders, headache and difficulty performing intense physical activity.
CONCLUSION
The norms for BREAST-Q reduction/mastopexy add another piece to the puzzle to what constitutes normal breast satisfaction and how surgical outcomes can be evaluated.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE IV
This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .
Topics: Female; Humans; Quality of Life; Sweden; Treatment Outcome; Retrospective Studies; Mammaplasty; Esthetics
PubMed: 35920862
DOI: 10.1007/s00266-022-03025-z -
Aesthetic Surgery Journal. Open Forum 2023Body contouring procedures have significantly increased in popularity in the United States.
BACKGROUND
Body contouring procedures have significantly increased in popularity in the United States.
OBJECTIVES
The authors sought to understand, categorize, and classify patients' experiences with postoperative complications following common body contouring procedures.
METHODS
PearlDiver (PearlDiver Technologies, Colorado Springs, CO), a database with over 90 million patients, was queried to identify patients who had undergone body contouring procedures between 2010 and 2021 using current procedural terminology (CPT) codes. The authors identified patients who underwent panniculectomy, abdominoplasty, brachioplasty, thighplasty, mastopexy, breast augmentation, augmentation mastopexy, breast reduction, and liposuction for analysis. They reviewed combined procedures and analyzed risk factors associated with the most common complications.
RESULTS
There were 243,886 patients included in the study. The majority of patients were female, between 50 and 59 years old, and had their procedures performed in the southern United States. There were an average of 25,352 procedures per year. The majority of cases involved breast surgeries. The most common preoperative comorbid conditions diagnosed 1 year before surgery were hypertension, obesity, and diabetes. The most common postoperative complications within 90 days were wound dehiscence, hematoma, and urinary tract infection. A logistic regression evaluating the association of the preoperative comorbid conditions with postoperative complications found that patients with obesity, tobacco use, diabetes, and hypertension had an increased risk of developing wound dehiscence, hematoma, and surgical-site infection.
CONCLUSIONS
The data suggest that patients with obesity, tobacco use, diabetes, and hypertension undergoing body contouring surgery are at greater risk of developing wound dehiscence, hematomas, and surgical-site infections. Understanding this data is imperative for providers to adequately identify associated risk factors, stratify patients, and provide adequate perioperative counseling.
PubMed: 37711766
DOI: 10.1093/asjof/ojad080 -
Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) Jun 2023Breast implants can be removed with breast explantation surgery (BES) for various reasons, including patient dissatisfaction, capsular contracture, implant infection or...
Breast implants can be removed with breast explantation surgery (BES) for various reasons, including patient dissatisfaction, capsular contracture, implant infection or rupture, breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma, and a recently emerging phenomenon called breast implant illness. There is very limited data on the imaging appearance after BES. A retrospective chart review was performed for patients with BES findings on imaging reports for the period between October 2016 and October 2021. When assessing BES techniques, a key element is determining whether the implant's fibrous capsule requires removal. The second important question is if the patient requires an additional aesthetic procedure after BES. BES techniques include capsulotomy, and partial, total, or en bloc capsulectomy. Adjunctive aesthetic or reconstructive procedures after BES include fat grafting, mastopexy, augmentation, and reconstruction with flaps. The majority of post-BES breast imaging findings are related to the surgical scar/bed, thereby confirming that the type of explantation surgery is important. Imaging findings after BES include focal and global asymmetries, architectural distortions, calcifications, calcified and non-calcified fat necrosis, masses, hematomas, seromas, capsular calcifications, and silicone granulomas. Most importantly, since these patients have residual breast tissue, paying attention to imaging features that are suspicious for breast cancer is necessary.
PubMed: 37443566
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13132173 -
Cureus Apr 2024Pyoderma gangrenosum is a rare ulcerative skin disease of uncertain etiology, which in some cases can be misdiagnosed as an infectious process. In even more unique...
Pyoderma gangrenosum is a rare ulcerative skin disease of uncertain etiology, which in some cases can be misdiagnosed as an infectious process. In even more unique cases, this can occur in the postoperative period. Termed postsurgical pyoderma gangrenosum, this type of inflammatory skin condition requires a high index of suspicion to be able to appropriately treat and reduce complications. We present a 55-year-old female who presented with multiple wounds following mastopexy and abdominoplasty. With a prompt diagnosis and a multidisciplinary approach, we could accurately care for the patient and minimize poor aesthetic sequela.
PubMed: 38738036
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.58060 -
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.... Nov 2022Nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) and direct-to-implant reconstruction (DTIR) allow patients to complete their surgical care in one surgery. However, for women with...
UNLABELLED
Nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) and direct-to-implant reconstruction (DTIR) allow patients to complete their surgical care in one surgery. However, for women with significant ptosis, NSM is frequently not offered or requires multiple procedures.
METHODS
We performed a retrospective review of a single-surgeon practice from 2016 to 2021 of a single-stage, modified, bidirectional adipodermal mastopexy to facilitate NSM and DTIR in patients with breast cancer and grades 2-3 ptosis. Demographics, intraoperative details, and postoperative outcomes were recorded. We also conducted a literature review and compared our technique to previously published approaches.
RESULTS
Sixty breast cancer patients (105 breasts) with grades 2-3 ptosis underwent NSM and prepectoral DTIR using this technique. The average nipple-areola complex (NAC) lift was 9cm (range, 4 -15cm), and the average preoperative nipple to inframammary fold distance was 12cm (range, 8 -17cm). Overall complications included seroma [n = 8 (8%)], T-junction dehiscence [n = 6 (6%)], mastectomy flap necrosis [n = 6 (6%)], and superficial/partial NAC necrosis [n = 2 (2%)] with no incidence of complete NAC necrosis. Comprehensive literature review confirmed that the modified, bidirectional adipodermal mastopexy has a favorable complication profile when compared with other previously described approaches despite its application to more challenging patient populations undergoing DTIR.
CONCLUSIONS
The modified bidirectional adipodermal mastopexy safely facilitates NSM and DTIR in breast cancer patients with ptosis without requiring multiple procedures or leaving behind breast tissue and, in our hands, is the preferred approach in this difficult patient population.
PubMed: 36419632
DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000004666 -
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.... Jan 2022Several methods have been developed for the treatment of ptosis and breast hypertrophy, with good early results but with dissatisfaction in the long term, due to loss of...
UNLABELLED
Several methods have been developed for the treatment of ptosis and breast hypertrophy, with good early results but with dissatisfaction in the long term, due to loss of volume and projection of the upper pole and recurrence of ptosis. In the face of this adversity, the purposes of the present study were to describe a surgical technique of breast reduction and mastopexy with silicone implants, named structured mammoplasty, and to present the outcomes of patients who underwent this technique.
METHODS
The structured mammoplasty technique with round silicone prostheses (surgical marking and stages), performed on 100 patients who were operated on between 2017 and 2020 and were followed up for a minimum of 12 months, was described. Postoperative and patient satisfaction assessments were made.
RESULTS
No major complications were observed in an average of 18 months of follow-up (ranging from 12 to 30 months). The maintenance of the outcome with a projected upper pole and rounded breasts resulted in a high level of satisfaction.
CONCLUSIONS
Structured mammoplasty with silicone implants is a safe and predictable option, ensuring a long-lasting shape. It can be applied to any breast that has surplus skin, making it a more reliable option in the arsenal of the plastic surgeon.
PubMed: 35186628
DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000004073 -
Aesthetic Surgery Journal. Open Forum Sep 2021Breast augmentation-mastopexy can yield an aesthetically attractive breast, but the 1-stage procedure is prone to unsatisfactory outcomes, including poor wound healing.
BACKGROUND
Breast augmentation-mastopexy can yield an aesthetically attractive breast, but the 1-stage procedure is prone to unsatisfactory outcomes, including poor wound healing.
OBJECTIVES
The authors evaluated whether postsurgical application of a polyurethane bra cup coated with oxygen-enriched olive oil (NovoX Cup; Moss SpA, Lesa, Novara, Italy) would decrease pain associated with augmentation-mastopexy and improve the quality of the surgical scar.
METHODS
This retrospective study was conducted at a single center from January 2016 to June 2019. All patients underwent 1-stage augmentation-mastopexy with the inverted T incision. For 2 weeks postsurgically, wounds were dressed either with the oxygen-enriched olive oil bra or with Fitostimoline (Farmaceutici Damor SpA, Naples, Italy). Patients indicated their pain intensity on postoperative days 2, 3, and 10, and patients and independent observers scored scar quality on the Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale (POSAS) 6 and 12 months after the procedure.
RESULTS
A total of 240 women (120 per study arm) completed the study. All the patients had satisfactory aesthetic results, and there were no tolerability concerns with either postoperative dressing. Compared with patients in the Fitostimoline group, patients who received the oxygen-enriched olive oil bra cup had significantly lower pain levels, and their surgical scars were given better scores on the POSAS.
CONCLUSIONS
The results suggest that maintenance of the surgical wound in a film of oxygen-enriched olive oil for 2 weeks is a safe, effective modality for suppressing pain and promoting healing following augmentation-mastopexy.
PubMed: 34131642
DOI: 10.1093/asjof/ojab016 -
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.... Jun 2024Surgical correction of gynecomastia currently ranks in the top five cosmetic procedures performed in men in the United States. Although removal of excess gland is...
Surgical correction of gynecomastia currently ranks in the top five cosmetic procedures performed in men in the United States. Although removal of excess gland is relatively straightforward, the combination of glandular/fatty excess, significant skin redundancy, nipple ptosis, and nipple-areolar complex hypertrophy poses a significant challenge in the male patient desiring inconspicuous scars. The latter renders any form of skin and nipple reduction/elevation using traditional mastopexy patterns or breast amputation with free nipple grafting less favorable due to the surgical stigmata and scars produced with these techniques. To that end, we present our experience treating cases of moderate to severe gynecomastia involving significant skin excess (defined as Simon grade IIb and III) with a technique focused on avoiding visible extra-areolar scars, called the glandular excision, liposuction-assisted, areolar mastopexy for nipple repositioning and skin reduction with internal quilting sutures.
PubMed: 38841522
DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000005869 -
Journal of Clinical Medicine Feb 2024The medicinal leech has been used in plastic surgery to resolve venous congestion that can threaten the viability of tissue transfer. Within the context of breast... (Review)
Review
The medicinal leech has been used in plastic surgery to resolve venous congestion that can threaten the viability of tissue transfer. Within the context of breast surgery, venous congestion is a pertinent consideration for reconstructive and non-reconstructive breast surgery such as mammoplasty and mastopexy. However, leeching is closely associated with complications such as infection, pain, and anaemia. This is the first systematic review that examines the methodology, efficacy, and post therapeutic outcome data across all existing studies on medicinal leeching in breast surgery. A systematic search of PubMed and Embase databases from their inception to November 2023 was conducted. Inclusion criteria included studies reporting on the use of leeches to resolve venous congestion in any breast surgery. The JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Case Series tool was used for bias analysis. Descriptive statistics were undertaken in Microsoft Excel. A total of 18 studies with a combined sample size of 28 were examined, including 4 case series and 14 case reports. Patients mostly underwent reconstructive breast surgery (75%). The median number of leeches used was two, with a median number of three leeching sessions per day and 3 days of leeching. Medicinal leeching successfully prevented the loss of 75% of all tissue transfers. The complication rate was high at 81.14% and mainly included infection and anaemia. Medicinal leeching is an effective method to relieve venous congestion in breast surgery but must be judiciously used within the clinical context of the patient to maximise efficacy and mitigate harm from complications.
PubMed: 38592085
DOI: 10.3390/jcm13051243 -
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.... Sep 2020Numerous augmentation/mastopexy methods have been described in the literature, including those reported in 16 publications in 2019. However, objective measurements of...
BACKGROUND
Numerous augmentation/mastopexy methods have been described in the literature, including those reported in 16 publications in 2019. However, objective measurements of breast dimensions are lacking, leaving little information on which to base treatment selection. The goal is to increase upper pole projection using an implant and correct ptosis by elevating the lower pole with the mastopexy.
METHODS
A PubMed search was conducted to identify published augmentation/mastopexy methods. Lateral photographs were matched for size and orientation and then compared using a 2-dimensional measurement system. Measurements were compared for 5 common approaches-vertical; periareolar; inverted-T, central mound; inverted-T, superior pedicle; and inverted-T, inferior pedicle. Four publications not fitting these 5 groups were also evaluated. Measurement parameters included breast projection, upper pole projection, lower pole level, breast mound elevation, nipple level, area, and breast parenchymal ratio.
RESULTS
A total of 106 publications were identified; 32 publications included lateral photographs suitable for comparison. Twenty-eight publications fitting 1 of the 5 groups were compared. All published augmentation/mastopexy methods increased breast projection and upper pole projection, although not significantly for inverted-T methods. Vertical augmentation/mastopexy was the only method that significantly raised the lower pole level ( < 0.05). The vertical technique also significantly ( < 0.01) increased the breast parenchymal ratio. Periareolar; inverted-T, central mound; and inverted-T, inferior pedicle methods produced nonsignificant increments in the breast parenchymal ratio.
CONCLUSIONS
Breast implants increase breast projection and upper pole projection. Only vertical augmentation/mastopexy significantly elevates the lower pole. This method also significantly increases the breast parenchymal ratio, achieving the surgical objectives.
PubMed: 33133945
DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003092