Friday, February 10, 2012

The Insanity of the Modern Tummy Tuck

Trinidad beach scene-by Dr. Yoho. Nothing to do with tummy tucks.
I am concerned about the fact that the Los Angeles tummy tuck has become synonymous with plastic and cosmetic surgery in some contexts. The fact is that this operation is not indicated in most cases. A tummy tuck or abdominoplasty is a major surgery which has a fatality rate of one in 3,000, according to the best medical literature we have. Older studies had a fatality or death rate of one in 625 surgeries. The patient is cut all the way from hip to hip. The fat and skin is separated from the muscle. The muscle is usually tightened, and a large portion of skin and excess fat is removed and then the patient endures a recovery which can last for many months.

Modern liposuction can accomplish many of these goals and for most patients it is the preferred alternative, even for very overweight patients. Recovery from liposuction is very modest compared to a tummy tuck. The death rate for liposuction may be as low as one in 50,000. Although after a liposuction with a large patient, some saggy irregular skin is to be expected, the skin shrinks to a much greater degree than most people would expect. It’s not like cutting and pasting a paper bag. The skin is the magic organ of the body, and just like after a pregnancy, after a liposuction the skin shrinks a great deal. Particularly helpful in this regard is the irritation that is produced by the liposuction process itself. This irritation or injury process accelerates and helps the shrinkage of the skin.

Nothing is perfect. Liposuction can produce irregularities, and just like abdominoplasty, major complications can occur. However, let the reader imagine the number of hospitalizations, major blood losses, and blood clots to the lungs and legs that occur with tummy tucks versus liposuction. It’s a ratio of ten to one or greater with the much safer procedure being liposuction.

Large-volume liposuction, or removal of more than five liters of fat, has become a standard and much safer procedure for the modern surgeon and the contemporary patient. We believe that this can be accomplished safely and efficiently in our hands, using our techniques, with a very modest risk. These surgeries result in very gratifying results, and if extra skin remains after the procedure and the patient is willing to have a secondary touch-up procedure, this can be removed much more easily than when the patient presents with all the fat to begin with. In other words, a second relatively inexpensive surgery can make a result with a smaller scar and less risk of major problems after a liposuction than trying to do it all at once. Particularly risky is the practice of doing a large liposuction and cutting skin out at the same time. This procedure can result in areas of skin death or problems of other kinds, including infection or sometimes other problems.

My firm belief is that liposuction under general anesthesia, particularly large-volume liposuction under general anesthesia, is connected with a much higher risk. My technique involves sedation and local anesthetic combined with two operating professionals who remove the fat rapidly and expose the patient to a much shorter operating time and less medication.

So if your surgeon recommends a tummy tuck, shop this around and be sure this is what you want. Look at pictures online and see Los Angeles cosmetic surgery website in particular to see if there is another part to this story that you haven’t heard.

 Be careful out there.

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Robert Yoho, M.D.