
"The finest results in any cosmetic surgery will always be a natural extension of the patient's own appearance." - Joel M. Rein, M.D.
In my practice more women seek reduction of oversized breasts than any other type of breast surgery. Women hate large breasts in spite of anything men may believe.
In my practice more women seek reduction of oversized breasts than any other type of breast surgery. This is amazing when we consider our culture's biased focus on women's breast anatomy.
This tells us a great deal about the physical and psychological
discomfort experienced by women with gigantomastia. Excessive breast size
stigmatizes a young woman socially. Many soon develop a pattern of dress
and posture, which attempts to camoflage their unwanted feature. Large
breasts are a physical impediment limiting active sports or dance participation.
The chronic weight begins to wear grooves into the soft tissue at the
shoulder strap lines and may even produce upper back and neck pain. Woman
hate them in spite of anything men may believe. Health insurance carriers
often share this 'male' bias, making insurance coverage for
surgery difficult to obtain. Reduction mammoplasty is viewed as cosmetic
in nature rather than reconstructive.
Fortunately surgical correction can be readily performed
during a 24-hour hospital stay. Patients recover quickly as healing from
surgery is not overly painful or physically limiting. Typical patients
are strongly motivated, making for rapid return to normal activity. Reduction
is done as a partial surgical removal of breast fat, gland and skin. No
deeper body cavities or muscle layers are involved. In perfoming the surgery
I use an "inverted T"; pattern modified by my own design, which
I feel produces the most natural and aesthetically pleasing breast form.
The incisions reside below the inframammary fold and circle the normal
areola. The great majority of patients will heal with favorable blending
of these scars after a year. I have not had a patient who felt breast
reduction was not worth the final appearance of her scars. Characteristically,
women having reduction surgery in their third decades or later wish they
had done it ten or more years sooner.
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