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Plastic Surgeon Dr. Michele Koo’s Blog | St. Louis | Kansas City Breast Reduction

Archive for the ‘Breast Reduction’ Category

Why Breast Reductions and Breast Lifts Can Change Your Life Go from Granny to Playboy!

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Did you know that breast reductions are normally covered by your insurance plan and is one of the best things you will ever do for yourself. You will lift your breasts and stop that awful skin on skin sweating which results from your breasts touching your abdominal skin.

My favorite quote from one of my patients that comes to mind describing the results: “I just went from National Geographic to Playboy.”

That truly is how you will feel way better than nature.

The heavy pulling weight on your shoulders and neck will be relieved with the reduction in size of your breasts. DR KOO guides you as to the size you will be reduced to which will still be proportionate to body but so much lighter and perkier.

Even your tension headaches from the pull of your heavy breasts will be relieved. You will be able to exercise and be much more active helping you lose weight and feel and look even better.

Dr Koo’s office will work with you to make everything very easy and do all the paper work for you. Her office works with patients from all over the United States and especially college students coming home for the summer and the holidays who have limited time to have the surgery and to do all the paper work.

The BREAST REDUCTION is very safe and DR MICHELE KOO is a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon with extensive experience in the surgery and will make sure that everything goes very safely and smoothly for you. She understands what a woman wants her breasts to look like. She will lift your breasts and reshape and resize them to make you feel so much more comfortable.

Most women retain their nipple sensation and are still able to go on to breast feed after a breast reduction surgery. The relief and change in self esteem is profound. This is especially true for the young adult woman or even teenage who are mercilessly teased about their big breasts.

The surgery is not painful with a quick recovery and can most often be performed as an outpatient.

Heavy Breasts that cause skin rashes and groove your shoulders? Why put up with that?

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

If you’re tired of saggy, heavy breasts that cause you shoulder, neck and back pain, with skin rashes, you need to explore the possibility of a breast reduction, breast lift with DR MICHELE KOO, MD, FACS, ST LOUIS, MISSOURI, 314-984-8331.

DR KOO truly believes that a BREAST REDUCTION is a very safe procedure that will change your life. Your breasts will be lifted, lighter and reshaped. You will feel that your breasts are shapelier and that you are able to do so much more physically than you ever have before. Your friends will keep asking you if you’ve lost weight and you’ll look and feel so much better.

It is difficult for you to exercise and get healthier due to the size and heaviness of your breasts. You are in a negative spiral downward with your large heavy breasts making you more inactive. The more inactive you are the more weight you gain and the more weight you gain the heavier yours breasts become.

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MOMMY MAKEOVER - A Sexy Body After Children IS Possible - Liposuction, Tummy Tuck, and Breast Lift and Augmentation

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

If you are sick and tired of being trapped by your saggy, lifeless, flat breasts and hanging skin with stretch marks after pregnancy and breast feeding there is something you can do about it.

Plastic surgery to remove all that excess skin and fat and lift your breasts to their original position with fullness on top can be achieved safely.

If you are looking for a MOMMY MAKEOVER, you have found the right person in Dr Michele Koo, MD, FACS, St Louis, MO, who is a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon. She will listen to exactly what you want and be able to get rid of that frustrating hanging large belly that has made you depressed for years with liposuction and a tummy tuck (abdominoplasty). At the same time you can address your breasts which may have lost most of the nice sexy full volume and is now hanging on your abdomen. She will examine you and determine if you need a breast lift alone or a breast lift along with a breast implant (breast augmentation) to achieve that full, firm, sexy and lifted breast that you used to have.

MOMMY MAKEOVERS addressing the breasts and tummy in one operation is very safe and Dr Koo will let you know how much can be done at one time safely, and whether you can achieve what you are looking for with only a breast augmentation and liposuction or if you need more contouring by removing skin with a breast lift and tummy tuck.

One of the most important aspects in the success of any surgical procedure is the physical condition of the patient at the time of surgery. Even though liposuction, breast augmentation and a tummy tuck are elective procedures, Dr Koo assesses you using the same standards as those used for anyone who is undergoing any type of surgery. This is very important for your safety and well being. Dr Koo emphasizes your safety above all and ensures that you will have an excellent outcome safely.

Dr Koo specializes in contouring the body after pregnancy and weight loss. She obtains a thorough medical history from all patients who are to undergo a MOMMY MAKEOVER and a diligent physical examination is performed. Surgical history, including previous procedures is obtained for the YOUR safety.

Patients with comorbid conditions such as tobacco use, hypertension, coronary artery disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, hepatitis C, and human immunodeficiency virus are screened carefully. Patients with a history of pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, or blood clotting disorders require added precautions, such as chemoprophylaxis and sequential compression devices.

Dr Koo uses sequential compression devices in the majority of liposuction, tummy tuck, and breast lift and breast augmentation procedures. Conditions that may increase the risk for deep venous thrombosis include chronic venous insufficiency, family history of thrombotic syndromes, obesity, trauma, severe infection, polycythemia, central nervous system disease, malignancy, homocystinemia, a history of pelvic or lower extremity radiation therapy, and use of birth control pills or hormone replacement therapy.

Medications that the patient may be taking is reviewed, as many common prescribed and over-the-counter medications may affect wound healing and blood clotting. Medications such as aspirin, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents, birth control pills, vitamin E, and herbal preparations such as St. John’s wort are recognized to interfere with the coagulation mechanism. Dr Koo recommends avoidance of such agents before surgery. Some medications may also interact with medications used during surgery.

MOMMY MAKEOVER BLOG continues on next Blog

BEAUTIFUL BREAST REDUCTION - BREAST LIFT - DR MICHELE KOO - MISSOURI and ILLINOIS

Sunday, January 18th, 2009
BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION BY DR MICHELE KOO

BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION BY DR MICHELE KOO

AFTER BREAST REDUCTION BY DR KOO

AFTER BREAST REDUCTION BY DR KOO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DR MICHELE KOO, MD, FACS, BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON

314-984-8331

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI, AND ILLINOIS

 

Did you know that breast reductions to relieve your back, neck and shoulder pain may be covered by your health insurance? DR MICHELE KOO, MD, FACS, BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON, ST LOUIS, MISSOURI will let you know if she thinks that your breasts will qualify for insurance coverage when she examines you.

BREAST REDUCTIONS are extremely safe and can be performed on an outpatient basis under general anesthesia. There are no age limitations and DR MICHELE KOO will let you know if she feels that it is safe for you to undergo this procedure which takes approximately 1 1/2 hours to 2 1/2 hours.

While DR KOO feels that the surgery is a wonderful life enhancing surgery, she also wants you to know that there are limitations and complications that can occur with any surgery and BREAST REDUCTIONS are not exception. The BREAST REDUCTION surgery will lift your breasts, reshape your breasts, and lighten them to the point of allowing you to feel that you can exercise to improve your health and weight. DR KOO often says that the BREAST REDUCTION surgery will be one of the absolute best things that you have ever done for yourself. The surgery will relieve the sweaty skin rashes under your breasts, relieve the grooving in your shoulders from the weight of your breasts, help relieve the headaches, neck and back pain you suffer from your saggy heavy breasts.

According to Farzad and Foad Nahai, MDs, in the Plastic Surgery Journal on Breast Redutions in 2006, “there were 145,822 breast reductions performed in the United States, positioning breast reduction as the fifth most common plastic surgical procedure performed by plastic surgeons.  Breast reduction has one of the highest patient satisfaction rates among plastic surgery procedures, with 93 percent of women reporting they would undergo the surgery again.  Reduction mammaplasty has also been shown to improve body self-image.

There are many procedures available to accomplish breast reduction, each with its unique combination of skin incision and resection patterns and approach to breast reshaping. The inferior pedicle Wise pattern reduction mammaplasty has long been the favored procedure in the United States.  Lassus and Lejour were instrumental in popularizing the vertical pattern breast reduction in Europe, and this trend is now being adopted by North American surgeons as well.  

In-depth knowledge of breast anatomy-in particular, the blood and nerve supply to the nipple-areola complex-is prerequisite to any type of surgical procedure on the breast. Key sensory nerves are the lateral and medial cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves T3, T4, and T5. The lateral branches exit the chest wall at the midaxillary line and progress medially along the pectoralis major fascia, with terminal sensory endings in the breast skin and the nipple-areola complex.  Branches from the lower cervical plexus supply sensation to the upper breast.

The blood supply to the breast is based on musculocutaneous perforators from the internal mammary, anterolateral intercostal and anteromedial intercostal, and fasciocutaneous perforators from the lateral mammary branches of the long thoracic artery. This network of vessels communicate with each other and branch and terminate at all four quadrants of the nipple-areola complex. In addition, the subdermal plexus is arranged in a radial pattern around the nipple-areola complex and provides for numerous pedicle options, including inferior, central, medial, superior, and lateral pedicles.  The viability of breast skin flaps is dependent on flap thickness, flap length-to-base width ratio, the presence of inflow vessels, and subdermal microcirculation. Factors such as smoking, radiation, and previous surgery can affect blood flow at these levels and result in breast flap necrosis. Cooper’s suspensory ligaments are the connective tissue support structures within the breast. These ligaments originate from the pectoralis muscle fascia and course through the breast parenchyma to attach to the dermis of the overlying skin. These attachments can be stretched with pregnancy, weight gain, and aging, resulting in excess breast mobility and ptosis.

In addition to the standard medical history and examination of pertinent systems, conditions that affect wound healing (such as smoking or diabetes) or bleeding times are of particular importance. Any history of easy bruising or extended bleeding times should be noted and a workup initiated when appropriate. Patients seeking breast reduction are often overweight, so any history regarding the risk of deep venous thrombosis or cardiopulmonary disease should be known. Any history of prior treatment for back pain, neck pain, or inframammary intertrigo should be documented, as most insurance companies will require this assessment before approving breast reduction. Familial or personal history of breast masses, breast cancer, abnormal mammograms, or current use of hormones (birth control pills or hormone replacement therapy) should be noted. History of pregnancy and breast feeding and maximum breast size during pregnancy and current bra size are recorded. Subjective report of nipple sensibility is also documented.

The physical examination includes patient height, weight, and calculation of the body mass index [weight in kilograms ÷ (height in meters)2]. A breast examination should be performed to asses the breasts for symmetry, the presence of masses, any evidence of shoulder notching from the bra, intertrigo, and the degree of breast ptosis. The description and grading of breast ptosis has been reported previously.  A set of objective breast measurements should be taken with a minimum measurement of the sternal notch to nipple distance and nipple to inframammary fold distance. Other helpful measurements are nipple-areola complex width, breast width, and nipple-to-sternal midline distances. Some authors include measurement of breast circumference and width to estimate breast weight.

Deep Venous Thrombosis/Pulmonary Embolism Prophylaxis

Women with a body mass index greater than 30 undergoing breast reduction have a low but real risk of deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism.  Operative times greater than 2 hours can increase this risk. Established effective precautionary practice includes the use of pneumatic compression devices with or without thromboembolic disease hose. A recent meta-analysis has demonstrated a 60 percent decrease in the incidence of deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism with the use of pneumatic compression devices.  To be fully effective, these devices should be on the patient and functioning before the induction of general anesthesia. The use of chemoprophylaxis administered subcutaneously in the perioperative period for plastic surgery procedures is currently controversial. There are no randomized clinical trials to evaluate the role of chemoprophylaxis in plastic surgery, and the risk of hematomas is unknown. Although the benefits and safety of chemoprophylaxis in general surgical and orthopedic procedures has been demonstrated, we cannot extrapolate the safety profile, in particular, the risk of hematoma, to plastic surgery procedures that involve a significant amount of undermining and raw surfaces. Current recommendations are that mechanical prophylaxis is used on any procedure lasting more than 1 hour and that chemoprophylaxis be used on major procedures such as abdominoplasty, thigh lift, belt lipectomy, transverse rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap reconstruction, surgical positions likely to contribute to venous stasis and/or compression, combined procedures, and procedures lasting more than 4 hours.

Smoking and Breast Reduction

Fortunately, smoking rates in the United States have been on the decline, attributable in part to comprehensive tobacco control programs. There is a direct link between smoking and delayed wound healing that represents a significant unfavorable shift in the risk-to-benefit ratio for breast reduction.

Many plastic surgeons insist that anyone who smokes more than the occasional cigarette must absolutely stop smoking at least 2 weeks before surgery. Patients can be referred to a smoking cessation program. A newer non-nicotine-containing medication, varenicline (Chantix; Pfizer, Inc., New York, N.Y.), has demonstrated some of the most effective smoking cessation rates among pharmacologic treatments. If necessary, serum nicotine levels can be checked before the procedure.

Informed Consent  

Informed consent includes a discussion of the location of surgical scars, the possibility that these scars can widen or thicken and that they are permanent. Temporary and permanent changes in nipple sensation, difficulty with breast-feeding or lactation, postoperative breast asymmetries, delayed wound healing, skin necrosis, partial or total nipple loss, hematoma, and seroma should be discussed. In addition to sharing preoperative and postoperative photographs of good results, it is beneficial to share photographs demonstrating some of the possible long-term complications and less favorable outcomes. Preoperative breast asymmetry is brought to the patient’s attention and the possibility of asymmetry postoperatively is discussed. A well-educated and well-informed patient with realistic expectations is more likely to tolerate a complication or less than ideal result than one who is not informed and ill prepared for the possibility of a suboptimal outcome. As Goldwyn said, the more the patient considers her reduction an aesthetic procedure, the less likely she is to be satisfied. The more she considers it a reconstructive procedure, the more likely she is to be satisfied. Breast reduction is a procedure covered by most insurance companies, provided that a minimum weight of tissue is removed. It can be challenging in some patients to estimate an accurate amount of tissue to be removed. These patients are informed of the possibility that their breast reduction may not meet certain insurance company criteria and thus the cost will not be covered.

Breast Reduction and Postoperative Lactation 

For women considering breast reduction that have yet to have children, the question of lactation following surgery should be addressed. Any significant resection of subareolar breast tissue will decrease the amount of breast tissue that is potentially milk producing. Several studies have demonstrated that approximately 70 percent of breast reduction patients can breast-feed but that only 30 percent do, similar to the rates in an unoperated population.  Although milk production may occur, lactation will be impossible following free nipple grafting.

Mammograms and Breast Cancer Surveillance 

Preoperative mammograms are obtained based on the recommendations made by the American Cancer Society. Women younger than 40 years with a family history of breast cancer or other risk factors and any woman older than 40 should have a mammogram before breast reduction to rule out the presence of abnormal findings. Women are informed that reduction mammaplasty will result in scarring and possible calcifications within the breast parenchyma that may be seen on future mammograms. For that reason, all women are advised to have a baseline mammogram 3 to 6 months after surgery that will serve as a baseline study with which to compare future studies.

The incidental finding of a cancer in breast reduction specimens is rare, less than 0.5 to 0.8 percent in large series.  A positive finding after surgery should be followed with a thorough workup, oncologic consultation, and treatment recommendations made based on findings. In the rare event that a suspicious mass is found during the breast reduction, an intraoperative frozen section can be performed to establish a diagnosis. Confirmation of a benign diagnosis does not require further action and the procedure can be completed as planned. If an equivocal or malignant diagnosis is made, the entire mass can be resected and the biopsy site marked (with clips or staples), and once an appropriate stopping point is reached, the breast can be closed and the case terminated. A formal workup should then take place with proper staging and oncologic consultation. This management strategy leaves most options available and involves the patient in the decision process. In some cases where the resection specimen contains the entire malignancy; radiation treatment according to a breast conservation therapy protocol may be the only adjuvant therapy necessary. Any formal oncologic procedure without proper staging, planning, and consent is not advised.

Choice of Location and Setting for Breast Reduction Surgery 

For the vast majority of patients, breast reductions are performed on an outpatient basis, either in a hospital, outpatient surgical center, or office-based surgicenter that has been accredited by the Association of Accrediting Ambulatory Surgical Facilities or state authorities. An office-based operating room that is not accredited is not the ideal setting and should be avoided. The patient’s general health, body mass index, and American Society of Anesthesiologists classification are taken into account when making the decision on an inpatient or outpatient procedure.

PROCEDURE OPTIONS IN BREAST REDUCTION 

There are many surgical options for breast reduction. Often the choice of surgical procedure is based on patient morphology, including body mass index and degree of nipple displacement, and the surgeon’s comfort level, training, and experience with certain procedures. Excellent results are produced with a variety of procedures; the key is to couple the patient’s needs and goals with a suitable operation. All procedures, except for liposuction only and reduction with free nipple graft, center on maintaining a vascular pedicle to the nipple-areola complex. There are four major steps in a reduction procedure: access incisions, parenchymal resection, breast shaping, and management of excess skin. Preinjection of the breast with epinephrine-containing solution should avoid the planned vascular pedicle to the nipple-areola complex. The safety and efficacy of epinephrine use and tumescent solution infiltration in reduction mammaplasty has been reported.  These methods decrease blood loss and decrease operative times. Although there is a theoretical increased risk of postoperative bleeding, this has not been proven.

The most common access incisions are the Wise and vertical patterns. The Wise pattern skin incision affords the widest access to the breast parenchyma and can accommodate a variety of pedicles. Making curvilinear incisions along the vertical and horizontal limbs instead of straight lines results in a more rounded final breast shape. Thinking in three dimensions, the cut edge of a sphere is not a straight line but a gentle curve. The vertical pattern skin incision affords adequate access to the breast parenchyma but to a lesser degree than the Wise incision. Multiple pedicle options are also possible. The circumareolar, Benelli type, access incision is limited by concentric skin excision around the nipple-areola complex. It offers more limited access to the parenchyma and limited pedicle choice to the nipple-areola complex.
There are a variety of patterns of parenchymal resection, and most can be undertaken through the skin incisions described above. With any type of resection, preservation of the pedicle to the nipple-areola complex is the priority. Breast shape is three dimensional, and the resection pattern should take into account the preservation and readjustment of this shape. Once the pedicle choice is made, the resection is undertaken with the final breast shape in mind. Typically, there is an incongruous amount of breast tissue laterally, which is usually addressed with direct resection and/or liposuction. Medial breast fullness is desirable, so tissue in this area is resected more conservatively, if at all. The same is true for upper breast fullness; tissue here is either preserved or, if resected, the breast reshaping fills the upper pole through transfer of new tissue to this area by means of reshaping technique.

The central mound technique of breast shaping is perhaps one of the easiest to visualize and execute, as it essentially mimics the shape of a round breast implant. The inferior pedicle Wise pattern shapes the breast by transposing the pedicle cephalad and supporting it with medial and lateral breast flaps.  The superior pedicle and superomedial pedicle techniques preserve upper breast tissue and use the medial and lateral breast pillars for projection, pedicle support, and eventual lower breast shape.  In the case of breast amputation and free nipple grafting (where a vascular pedicle to the nipple-areola complex is not a concern), Wise pattern lateral and medial breast flaps are closed around superocentrally preserved breast tissue. Ways of improving long-term results have been described, including an inferior breast mound to preserve the rounded appearance of the lower pole of the breast.  Whichever method of parenchymal resection is used, it is important to remember that it is not what is removed but what is left behind that counts.

In the final stage, excess skin is addressed. With the Wise pattern resection, excess skin is typically resected with the breast parenchyma. Final tailoring usually involves resection of medial and lateral dog-ears along the horizontal inframammary fold incision. If possible, final skin tailoring is performed in curvilinear fashion to mimic the curve on the cut end of a spherical object.  This maintains a rounded appearance and avoids a boxy flattened breast, especially in the inferior pole. With the vertical pattern incision, once the medial and lateral pillars are brought together, the excess vertical skin is tailor tacked to flatten the breast on lateral view, much like the inverted image of a naturally appearing breast. The excess skin at the base of the vertical component can be tailored for a purse-string closure, a mini-T closure, or a laterally extended L or J closure. The Benelli technique removes excess skin only in a concentric manner around the nipple-areola complex and relies on a purse-string closure to gather the wound edges around the nipple-areola complex. In larger resections, this can result in pleating, a starburst scar pattern, and flattening of the breast. The best results are achieved with a small resection. Another method of breast reduction is the no vertical scar technique originally described by Passot and more recently reported on by Lalonde et al. and Nagy et al. Its proponents claim that the elimination of the vertical scar improves safety and aesthetic results. 

Liposuction Alone

Liposuction-alone breast reduction is most effective in patients with mild volume excess, normal skin elasticity, and minimal ptosis. It is generally low impact and safe.  Liposuction alone is not a good choice in the young, more fibrous breast that has little fatty tissue. Furthermore, liposuction alone would not be covered by insurance.

Benelli Type Circumareolar Reduction 

This procedure accesses the breast parenchyma through a circumareolar incision. A central mound is preserved and surrounding breast tissue is removed. A donut skin excision is performed, and closure depends on a purse-string suture. This procedure is best for the mild to moderate reductions (approximately 200 g or less) with up to 3 cm of nipple-areola complex elevation needed. The circumareolar reduction has not gained wide acceptance in the United States because most reductions here are larger volumes. The purse-string closure can result in a flattened breast, pleating, and a starburst scar.

Wise Skin Pattern Reduction 

The Wise pattern skin excision and inferior dermoglandular pedicle represents the most popular breast reduction technique used by plastic surgeons in the United States. This skin pattern excision is very versatile and can accommodate an inferiorly, superiorly, or centrally based dermoglandular pedicle. It is applicable to a wide range of reductions, has a relatively easy learning curve, achieves predictable results, and has one of the safest and most reliable vascular pedicles to the nipple-areola complex, with a good record of maintaining nipple sensibility. Some of the disadvantages of this procedure are the lengthy scars, the need for significant flap undermining, and the risk of bottoming-out and pseudoptosis of the breast over time. A reliance on the skin to shape the breast rather than breast shaping through parenchymal sutures can result in flat, boxy, nonprojecting breasts.

Vertical Breast Reduction 

The vertical pattern breast reduction has been slowly gaining popularity in the United States. It has a circumareolar scar and a scar vertically down to the inframammary fold. It is particularly effective at preserving breast projection and shape. A vertical skin pattern may be combined with superior, medial, lateral, or inferior pedicles. This technique is effective for a wide range of reductions, reaching its limits as the inframammary fold to nipple-areola complex distance increases beyond 15 to 18 cm. In these patients, the redundant skin at the inframammary fold is less likely to be adequately managed with a purse-string suture alone, so a small T, L, or J excision of skin may be needed. This technique does have a long learning curve and does require some time postoperatively for tissue settling until the final breast shape is achieved.

Breast Amputation and Free Nipple Graft 

For extremely large (>2000 g) reductions and very ptotic breasts with very long nipple to notch distances, a reliable pedicle to the nipple-areola complex cannot always be preserved. In these patients, an amputation is performed based on the Wise skin pattern and the nipple is preserved and repositioned as a free graft on a deepithelialized bed. This is a safe and effective procedure for extremely large breasts and a less risky option for smokers. The nipple often undergoes desquamation in the course of healing, leading to partial pigment loss and loss of nipple projection. Pigment loss is more distressing and harder to manage in patients with black skin. This is very rare for DR MICHELE KOO, she usually is able to perform any amount of surgery up to 2800-3000 gms from each breast without a free nipple graft.

Preoperative Markings 

Markings should be made with the patient standing or sitting upright with the shoulders relaxed and slightly rolled back and face looking forward. There are many descriptions of particular marking techniques in breast reduction. Whatever the technique, there are several key principles common to all. Sternal midline and breast midlines are marked. The key marking that all other markings depend on is the new location of the nipple-areola complex. There are many methods and anatomical landmarks by which the new position of the nipple-areola complex can be based such as the anterior projection of the inframammary fold. Markings made with the breast weight partially supported (breast supported with the nonmarking hand) can aid in avoiding positioning the nipple-areola complex too high and keeping the horizontal incision within the inframammary fold. For the vertical technique, the nipple should be marked 1 to 2 cm lower than these standard markings. It is advisable to not fixate on a single measurement when deciding on the new position of the nipple-areola complex but rather to take into account the collective anatomical findings. These might include the patient’s height, new location of the nipple-areola complex relative to the humerus, and an imaginary line from the xiphoid to the anterior axillary fold, estimating the location of a low cut bra, shirt, or bathing suit line. Paying attention to these relationships avoids positioning the nipple-areola complex too high. The inframammary fold is marked, also with the breast supported to avoid placing this mark too low. If liposuction is to be performed as an adjunct, markings are made before surgery. Additional guidelines for markings that will enhance results are listed in. 

POST OPERATIVE MANAGEMENT 

Immediate Phase 

Breast incisions can be topped with adhesive tapes in the operating room. Liquid adhesives, such as benzoin or Mastisol (Ferndale Laboratories, Ferndale, Mich.), can prolong the adherence of tapes but may cause skin irritation and blistering. If drains are placed, they are typically removed on the first postoperative day, unless concomitant breast liposuction was performed, in which case the drains may be left in longer. Inpatients are monitored for nipple viability and hematoma by observing symmetry and firmness. All patients are given instructions to limit physical activity for 2 weeks or more. Activities of daily living are typically resumed on the first postoperative day. The first postoperative visit is at 1 week or earlier if needed. The tapes are exchanged and an examination confirms the state of the nipple, incisions, skin flaps, and overall breast symmetry.

Long-Term Postoperative Care 

Patients are given taping instructions for all incisions. In the absence of skin irritation, taping can be continued for 3 months to minimize scar appearance. A soft elastic nonwire support bra can be worn for the first 2 weeks and then weaned until the end of the fourth week, when the patient may wear their bra of choice. Follow-up should be arranged at 6 and 12 months to assess final breast shape, symmetry, and nipple-areola complex sensibility.

MANAGEMENT OF COMPLICATIONS 

Complications range from mild to severe and may be early or late. Total complication rates have been reported to range from 6 to 43 percent. The most common complication, independent of reduction technique, is delayed wound healing, which has been reported to be as low as 2.2 to 10 percent to as high as 20 to 30 percent.  Proper patient selection and surgical planning will help decrease the chances of certain undesirable outcomes. Gentle handling of tissues, being mindful of the dermoglandular neurovascular pedicle, maintenance of breast flaps of adequate thickness, and closure without undo tension are also important. Despite all this, in the best of hands and in the optimal patient, complications will occur. Fortunately, many of the complications that occur with reduction mammaplasty can be resolved with favorable outcomes.

Early Complications 

Delayed Wound Healing 

Delayed wound healing is the most common complication in reduction mammaplasty regardless of technique and is related to closure with undue tension, underlying pressure from a seroma or hematoma, flap necrosis and ischemia, infection, or background disease that delays wound healing (diabetes, poor nutrition, smoking, steroids).  Typical locations for wound dehiscence are the T-junction: the three-way intersection of the vertical and horizontal incisions, the purse-string closure of a vertical reduction, and the junction of the nipple-areola complex and vertical limb incision. Sometimes, delayed primary closure can be performed; however, these areas are often managed conservatively and left to close on their own once the underlying problem has been addressed.

Poor Nipple Vascularity 

Partial or total nipple necrosis can be a devastating complication. Early and frequent nipple monitoring with appropriate identification of a nipple with vascular compromise followed by appropriate action may avoid total nipple loss. Sometimes, the appearance of the nipple during inset is the initial sign that a problem may occur. A pale or bluish nipple with limited bleeding on the cut edge warrants very close postoperative observation. Poor or dark blue blood flow from a pin prick is also worrisome. Sometimes, the closure of all wounds, emergence from general anesthesia, patient rewarming, and a normal nonpharmacologic blood pressure will reverse the changes associated with poor vascularity to the nipple, and it will turn pink with normal capillary refill within the first hour after the end of general anesthesia. An objective assessment of the blood flow to the nipple is the fluorescein intravenous dye test and a Wood’s lamp.  If there is an indication of compromised vascularity, an immediate free nipple graft should be performed. A free nipple is grafted to healthy deepithelialized vascularized dermis. Grafting onto fat or a poorly vascularized area will not work. If the nipple shows signs of ischemia in the early postoperative period despite normal blood pressure and core body temperature, immediate action is taken. Provided that undue pressure on the nipple pedicle from a hematoma is ruled out, the nipple should be released from its inset position, effectively relieving undue tension on the nipple pedicle. The nipple will generally retract 1 or 2 cm. If the nipple does not show immediate signs of improved blood flow, the patient should be taken back to the operating room for conversion to a free nipple graft onto a well-vascularized bed. For cases where partial or total nipple necrosis was not identified or apparent in the early postoperative period, conservative wound care until closure is achieved by primary healing is best. Nipple reconstruction is then undertaken at an appropriate time. Depigmentation can be treated with tattooing, but results vary. Total nipple loss will require reconstruction with skin grafts and/or local flaps.

Hematoma 

Although not common, a hematoma may be hard to recognize until it is sizable. The presence of breast swelling, distensibility of the skin, and large areas of undermining can make a small hematoma hard to identify. Hematoma may occur within hours after surgery or up to 2 weeks postoperatively. Presentation of a hematoma can include unilateral pain, swelling beyond expectation with significant asymmetry, tight and discolored skin flaps, or excessive bloody output from a drain or suture line. Hematomas should be drained at the time of diagnosis in the operating room, with adequate lighting and access to hemostatic devices. Often, a definitive bleeding point is not found, but it should be pursued. Fluid resuscitation and blood administration are prescribed as indicated. Late hematomas should be aspirated with a large-bore needle or surgically drained to avoid abscess formation and contour deformities.

Skin Flap Necrosis 

Flap necrosis may be devastating and occurs when flaps are made too thin, the patient smokes (or is exposed to secondary smoke), or pressure necrosis occurs from dressings that are too tight or because of pressure from an underlying hematoma. As with the worrisome nipple, blood flow to suspect skin flaps can be measured objectively with intravenous fluorescein. If debridement and immediate direct closure without undo tension can be achieved, it is preferable. In more severe cases with large areas of tissue loss, conservative wound management with healing by secondary intention or early skin grafting is advised. Skin graft take on soft breast fat with poor circulation can be difficult to achieve. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can accelerate healing but is costly.  A wound vacuum-assisted closure device may be considered in severe cases or in preparation for a skin graft.

Deep Venous Thrombosis/Pulmonary Embolism 

The most worrisome and life-threatening complication is deep venous thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism. In the event of difficulty breathing or poor oxygen saturation within the first several days after surgery, deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism is the assumed diagnosis until proven otherwise. The most rapid and minimally invasive method of diagnosis is a contrast-enhanced computed tomographic scan of the chest.  If contrast is contraindicated or a computed tomographic scan is unavailable, a ventilation/perfusion lung scan can be performed. A Doppler ultrasound examination of the lower extremities can also be performed looking for evidence of thrombosis. Management of deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism has been described previously.

Infections 

Cellulitis can occur and may present as local erythema, increased pain or drainage, and/or fever. It should be treated immediately with the appropriate antibiotics and followed closely. Passage of a needle into the breast can rule out seroma or diagnose an underlying abscess. Abscess is rare, but should it occur, it should be drained.

Late Complications 

Seroma 

Untreated seromas can cause wound separation and delayed healing. If a seroma is suspected, it can be needle aspirated in the clinic. Often, multiple aspirations are required before the seroma resolves. Seromas recalcitrant to multiple aspirations can be excised directly and closed over drains with suturing to obliterate the dead space.

Scars 

Scars can be a problem because of poor location or hypertrophy/keloid formation. Simple taping is a very effective means of avoiding scar hypertrophy.  Should hypertrophy or keloids occur, treatment should start at the earliest indication. When they do occur, the vertical limb is usually spared. Direct lesional injections with steroids alone or in combination with 5-fluorouracil have been shown to be effective.  Scars above or below the inframammary fold can be distressing to the patient. Effort should be made to minimize medial extension of incisions on the breast, as the scar can be seen with low-cut clothing. With vertical scar reduction, the inframammary fold is often raised as a result of the reduction; thus, the vertical incision marking should end within 2 to 4 cm above the inframammary fold or the scar may extend below the inframammary fold. With circumareolar procedures, as the reduction volume increases, so does the risk of permanent skin pleating and starburst scar formation. These can be treated with conversion to a vertical or Wise scar pattern reduction for extra skin removal and formation of a new circumareolar skin-to-nipple-areola complex relationship that will avoid pleats and starburst scars.

Shape 

A problem shared by all breast reduction techniques is bottoming-out or pseudoptosis, defined as an excess amount of breast tissue extending below the inframammary fold with a normal nipple position. This is more often associated with the Wise pattern inferior pedicle reduction. Any effort to reshape a breast that has been previously reduced must take into account the pedicle to the nipple-areola complex and avoid its injury. Regardless of the access incisions, breast reshaping and skin tightening is used to recapture an acceptable breast shape. Small puckers, more common in vertical reductions, are excised directly, as are dog-ears that can occur with Wise pattern incisions.

Nipple Position 

Abnormal nipple position is very unforgiving and can mar the appearance of otherwise well-shaped symmetric breasts. Any effort to reposition a nipple must take into account the original pedicle to the nipple-areola complex and avoid vascular compromise. Minor nipple asymmetry can be managed with crescent skin removal from above the nipple. Nipples that need to be raised more than 1 cm must be released circumferentially and repositioned with the excess skin inferior retailored and incorporated into the vertical incision. Nipples that are too high are very problematic and difficult to manage. If there is concomitant bottoming-out of the breast, it is best to reshape the breast relative to the nipple. If the nipple is truly too high, it must be repositioned lower on the breast mound, leaving a scar above the nipple.

Asymmetry 

Minor asymmetry in shape or size is often acceptable to the patient, especially if the same asymmetric right-to-left relationship that was present preoperatively is maintained postoperatively. Significant size asymmetry can be managed with liposuction or further parenchymal resection.

Fat Necrosis 

Fat necrosis presents as a local area of firm or hard tissue. This is usually noted close to the breast surface, as it is more easily palpated there. Deeper areas of fat necrosis may be diagnosed only by radiography. Should fat necrosis occur, it should be needle aspirated to confirm the diagnosis and to rule out a neoplasm followed by excision or aspiration if symptomatic.

Changes in Nipple Sensation 

All patients are informed during the consent process that nipple sensation can permanently decrease, increase, or not change after reduction mammaplasty. Early changes in sensation are often temporary and should be managed expectantly until at least 6 months after surgery. Changes in nipple sensation have been documented up to 1 year after surgery. Multiple reports exist comparing techniques based on sensory outcomes. One demonstrated that no difference exists between medial and inferior dermoglandular pedicles and that resection weight was not a variable in sensory outcomes.  Another study did not find a difference between the techniques that preserved breast tissue at the base of the breast, but found that decreased sensation occurred with techniques that resected base of breast tissue.  No difference based on amount of breast tissue resected was found, confirming prior reports.

CONCLUSIONS 

With one of the highest satisfaction rates among plastic surgery procedures, breast reduction can be rewarding for both the patient and the physician. A clear understanding of breast anatomy is a prerequisite to performing any of the many techniques available. Common and critical to all techniques is the preservation of the vascularity to the nipple-areola complex. Currently, the most frequently used method for breast reduction is the Wise pattern inferior pedicle technique, although the vertical reduction method is gaining in popularity.

Excellent results can be achieved with many different types of procedures. Identification and proper early intervention of complications are important and integral to practicing safe and efficacious reduction mammaplasty.”

DR MICHELE KOO wants you to understand that still overall the BREAST REDUCTION procedure is one of the best things you will ever do for yourself, to enable yourself, and to break the cycle of large heavy breasts and the inability to exercise and then weight gain and further increase in breast size.

Take charge of your life now and call DR MICHELE KOO, MD, FACS. BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON, ST LOUIS, MISSOURI for a BREAST REDUCTION consultation.  314-984-8331.

 

 

BREAST REDUCTION DR MICHELE KOO ST LOUIS, SPRINGFIELD, KANSAS CITY, COLUMBIA MISSOURI

Friday, October 24th, 2008

 

Before Breast Reduction

Before Breast Reduction 40 EE/FF

After Breast Reduction 38 C/D

After Breast Reduction 38 C/D

  

Dr Michele D Koo, MD, FACS is a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon specializing in breast and body contouring. She is a member of the Aesthetic Society of Plastic Surgeons.

If you have ever been frustrated with your large, heavy, pendulous breasts that make you feel overweight and matronly, you need to see Dr Koo for a consultation on how to reduce the size of your breasts and lift them onto your chest and off of your tummy.

Most insurance carriers covers breast reductions and Dr Koo and her staff will help you through this process. Dr Koo will be able to let you know how much weight she will be able to take off depending on what size you ultimately want to go to. The important thing is that your breasts will be lifted, lighter and be so much shaplier.

You do not need to feel trapped by your body with heavy breasts that prevent you from exercising and losing weight. Dr Koo understands that you are in a vicious cycle where the heavier your breasts, the less able you are to exercise, and the less you are able to exercise, the heavier your breasts become. She understands how depressing it is for you not to be able to buy normal bras and clothes that are pretty.

Dr Michele Koo, MD, FACS, also understands the terrible discomfort you have to endure because of the weight and pull of your large breasts. You probably have deep shoulder grooving, neck and back pain, and headaches from your saggy heavy breasts. You also probably have terrible sweating and rashes under your breasts from rubbing on your abdomen.

Dr Koo lifts and reduces the breasts but preserves the attachment of the nipple so there is a very little chance of losing sensation to the nipple. The scars will fade in time and around the nipple areolar complex, down the center under the nipple, and a short scar under the breasts. Dr Koo creates your own underwire support with the scar under the breasts to preserve the shape of your breasts.

See Dr Michele Koo, MD, FACS in St Louis, Missouri for a consultation to begin your new life with lighter shaplier breasts that finally will allow you to get back to a normal healthier lifestyle. You do not have to hide in large dresses and tops because of your heavy, saggy breasts. You can have them reduced, lifted, and reshaped to make you feel and look so much better.

Why not start today on your way to being healthier with lighter, lifted breasts that will finally allow you to lose weight and feel better about yourself.

Call Dr Michele D Koo, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon, St Louis, Missouri 314-984-8331 and ask for a consultation today.

BREAST REDUCTION FOR NECK AND BACK PAIN RELIEF

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

BREAST REDUCTION ST LOUIS-ILLINOIS-SPRINGFIELD

314-984-8331

DR MICHELE KOO, MD, FACS

BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON

BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION 36 HH

BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION 36 HH

AFTER BREAST REDUCTION 38 C BRA

AFTER BREAST REDUCTION 38 C BRA

Have you always wanted shaplier, lifted, lighter perkier breasts?

Did you know that was possible and have your insurance cover the surgery?

Are you sick and tired of your skin sweating under your breasts and getting rashes all the time?

Are you tired of not being able to exercise and walk comfortably? Are you sick of the grooves in your shoulders?

The patient pictured in the photograph is a 36 year old woman from St Louis, Missouri who complained of skin rashes under her breasts, neck, shoulder, and back pain from her very heavy, pendulous breasts.

She underwent a breast reduction by DR MICHELE KOO, MD, BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON, ST LOUIS, MISSOURI, 314-984-8331 and has been transformed from a 38 DDD/EE to a 36D.

She is ecstatic about her beautiful new breasts and has gained so much self confidence. Her friends keep asking her if she’s lost a great deal of weight. Her shoulders and neck no longer hurt and she is able to walk and exercise comfortably. She loves wearing pretty bras and cute tops and dresses.

She no longer has to spend a fortune on ugly big bras that look like parachutes.

Dr Michele D Koo, MD, FACS, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon, St Louis-Kansas City,Missouri and Illinois can reduce, lift, and reshape your breasts with a breast reduction (reduction mammaplasty) so that your back, neck, and shoulders are relieved of the grooving, pull, and pain.

The breast reduction surgery takes approximately 2 to 2 1/2 hours under general anesthesia and is extremely safe. You may either go home on the day of surgery or stay over night if you choose. You will drive the next day and you will be able to return to a office type of occupation in 1-3 days and in 7-14 days to a physical type occupation.

Your recovery time is minimal.

You will be given a surgical compressive bra after your breast reduction and may have some drains out the side of your breasts when you go home. Dr Koo will see you in the office 4 days after the surgery when the drains will likely be removed. Most patients rarely complain of pain after the surgery and are pleasantly surprised that the recovery is very minimal.

Dr Koo’s patients will tell you that the breast reduction surgery is one of the best things they have ever done for themselves.

The pre- breast reduction patients often feel so trapped by their heavy breasts. They feel they are unable to exercise adequately to loose weight and the more weight they gain the larger their breasts become. They are caught in a vicious cycle that they cannot break themselves.

Dr Koo sees patients from throughout Missouri, Cape Girardeau, Kansas City, Springfield, Farmington, Illinois and the remainder of the United States. Her office will make arrangements for your out of town stay and help you in any way you need.

Dr Michele Koo, MD, of St Louis, Missouri, 314-984-8331, can help you break that weight gain cycle and reduce, lift, and reshape your breasts.

You will have freedom like you’ve never had before and relief of shoulder, neck, and back pain. Your tension headaches should also lessen from the relief of the pull on your shoulders and neck.

You can feel like your breasts are youthful again, lifted, off of your tummy and back on your chest. The areola will be made smaller and shaplier and you will not have to deal with all of that excess breast tissue getting in your way.

Please feel free to call Dr Koo’s office, 314-984-8331, with questions and to talk to other patients who have undergone this exact surgery.

Begin your new life after breast reduction today, DR MICHELE D KOO, MD., 314-984-8331, ST LOUIS, MO.

 

 

LIFT THOSE LARGE HEAVY BREASTS AND MAKE THEM SMALLER AND SHAPLIER

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION 40 FFF/GG
BEFORE BREAST REDUCTION 40 FFF/GG

 AFTER BREAST REDUCTION 38 D

 

If you want to get rid of the rashes under your heavy saggy breasts and if you’re sick and tired of the aching in your back, neck and shoulders…you need to call Dr Michele D Koo, MD, FACS, St Louis, Missouri, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon and a Member of the Aesthetic Society to change your life.

Dr Koo finds breast reductions, breast lifts (mastopexy) to be two of the most rewarding surgeries for her patients. Almost all of her patients say that this surgery is one of the best things they have ever done for themselves and they wish they had done it when they were younger.

Her patients state that having a breast reduction has allowed them to be much more active, thus allowing them to go on and be healthier and to lose weight.

The fear is that after the breast reduction, you will have no breasts remaining but, in fact, your breasts will be lifted, perkier, on your chest instead of pointing down to your toes, and appear so much fuller that you’ll wonder if Dr Koo snuck implants in your breasts while you were not looking!!

The grooves in your shoulders will become less pronounced and less painful after the breast reduction. Your tension headaches from the pull on your neck, shoulders, and back will be gone almost immediately after the breast reduction surgery. 

Call Dr Michele Koo, MD, FACS, St Louis, Missouri (314-984-8331), to begin your new life. You can see many more photographs and talk to so many woman who have had the breast reduction surgery and hear how happy they are.

Breast reduction surgery is covered by many insurance carriers and Dr Koo’s office will help you with this benefit. The criteria is determined by the amount of weight Dr Koo feels she will remove from each breast.

She is an expert on breast reductions in the St Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, Southern Illinois, Cape Girardeau Areas and throughout the United States and will be able to examine you and tell you if she thinks your insurance will cover the breast reduction surgery or not. Her office also will work with you on financing.

 

BREAST REDUCTION TO CHANGE YOUR LIFE

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008
AFTER 38 C/D

AFTER 38 C/D

BEFORE 42 DDD/EE
BEFORE 42 DDD/EE
 

Are you tired of your heavy sagging breasts rubbing the skin of your abdomen and being too low?

Dr Michele Koo, MD, FACS, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon, St Louis, Missouri 314-984-8331 can lift them and make them perky and put them back on your chest instead of sitting on your abdomen.

Dr Michele Koo, St Louis, MO, lifts the breasts, makes them shaplier and smaller relieving the pain and pull in your shoulders, relieving the tension in your neck that causes the constant headaches and back pain.

Dr Koo, preserves the nipple areolar complex attached to the underlying breast tissue thereby allowing the best chance of preserving the sensation of the nipple. She lifts the breasts and removes the excess skin and reshapes the breasts to give you comfort and allow you to go on to be more active and to allow you to try to be healthier and more active.

The patient that is pictured was able to go on to lose 25 lbs slimming her waists and hips which can be seen in the after picture.

You do not have to live with the constant skin rashes and sweat under your breasts.

They will be shaplier, lighter, and, of course, prettier. Your friends will ask if you have lost weight, and you will think your neck, back and shoulders feels so much better. You’ll have shaplier breasts that you may never have had with a breast reduction which is often covered under your medical insurance. 

Dr Koo’s staff is extremely experienced and helpful in obtaining insurance approval of your breast reduction. Dr Koo will be able to determine if she thinks that insurance will cover the procedure after she examines you to see how much breast tissue she feels she can remove safely and in keeping with the size you ultimately want to become. If she does not think that you will qualify for insurance coverage, her office will help you obtain financing should you still decide to go forth with the breast reduction surgery.

Dr Michele Koo utilizes the most delicate surgical techniques and newest sutures so as to minimize the appearance of your scars. She also tries to hide them in the natural folds of your skin and breasts, disguising them to the optimal locations.

After the breast reduction, you will wish you had done this so much sooner. You will be able to return to an office type of work in 4 days and you may return to a more strenuous type of job between 2-3 weeks. You will wear a compressive surgical bra continuously for 4 days after the surgery and then will be able to switch to a tight sports bra thereafter for the next 2 weeks.

 

Call DR MICHELE D KOO, BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON (314) 984-8331 TO CHANGE YOUR LIFE.


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