After reading this paper you might want the surgery or you might not. Plastic surgery, a form of art, can reconstruct your body and renew your confidence but can you accept the risks involved? Plastic surgery ranges from one- thousand dollars to three- thousand dollars or more depending on the surgery (Body fat reduction: Suction-Assisted Lipectomy). There are plenty types of plastic surgery. One type is called liposuction. The best candidates for liposuction are of relatively normal weight with pockets of excess fat in particular areas.
They should be physically healthy, psychologically stable, and realistic in your expectations. An important thing is to have firm and elastic skin. “Loose, drooping skin won’t reshape to your body’s new contours, and may require an additional procedure to surgically remove the excess skin. It will leave visible scars” (Liposuction). Before you decide to go through liposuction try diets and weight loss programs. If you can’t loose a certain buldge then liposuction is a good alternative (Thigh Liposculpture).
Liposuction is started by making a small incision, (about half an inch or less), in the skin, often in or near the buttock crease or a previous scar. The small suction rod, called a cannula, is inserted and connected to a vacuum source with a suction tube. The vacuum sucks the fat out and leaves everything else intact (Thigh Liposculpture). Usually the surgery takes about an hour or two, but the time required may vary considerably from thirty minutes to several hours, depending on the amount of work your having done.
If your procedure is not too extensive – that is, if no more than one and a half pints of fat and fluid will be removed – liposuction can be performed under local anesthesia, which numbs the area, combined with a sedative to make you drowsy” (Liposuction). A benefit of having liposuction done is that fat is removed and gone forever. It can offer a new shape for people who thought it was impossible. “Liposuction will not, however, prevent you from gaining weight in the future, and will not keep you fit and in shape.
In order to assume good skin contour, you must be conscientious about wearing the support garments recommended be your doctor” (Thigh Liposculpture). Does the fat come back? “Fat cells are not though to regenerate, and contour improvement should be permanent. If you gain weight, the fat cells that are lift behind will get bigger just as all of the other fat cells in the body do, but your body will retain the improved proportions. The liposuction area usually does not become as fat as they once were, (relative to the rest of the body), because fat cells have been permanently removed.
This is the key point about the results achieved be liposuction, and explains why it is also called body contouring or body sculpting” (Thigh Liposculpture). After the surgery a drainage tube might be inserted beneath your skin for one to three days to remove any fluid buildup that occurs. An elastic dressing, girdle, or body stocking must be worn over the treated area to control swelling and bleeding, and to help your skin shrink to fit your new contour. “The suctioned areas will be swollen and bruised, and you may feel a burning sensation.
You may temporarily loose all feeling in the suctioned area (Liposuction). Liposuction is relatively safe, but there is no surgery risk-free. “The major risk is from anesthesia, the degree of risk varies with the type of anesthesia” (Thigh Liposculpture). Individuals vary greatly in their anatomy, their physical reactions, and their healing abilities, and the outcome is never completely predictable. Some Complications include hematoma, (a collection of blood under the skin that must be removed be the surgeon), injury to the nerves that control infection and reactions to the anesthesia (Facelift: Rhytidectomy).
Another type of plastic surgery is known as breast implants. The largest study of health effects of silicone breast implants cast doubts over the widely suspected link between the devices and diseases of the muscles and joints. Mayo Clinic reported a study of more than two thousand and two hundred women in New England Journal of Medicine, concluded that they found no association between breast implants and the connective-tissue diseases that were studied. In 1992, the food and drug administration believed that silicone implants are hazardous because of a moratorium on their use (Schwartz, John).
Pathologist Nir Kossovosky believes silicone breast implants can affect a woman’s immune system, and he has developed a blood test to prove it. ” The blood test has helped win lawsuits against implant manufacturers (Taubes, Gary). About one thousand and eight hundred women sued Dow Chemical CO. saying that the silicone seeped out through the implants flexible walls or popped out of ruptured implants. “Dow Chemical CO. failed to properly test silicone for use in the human body and concealed the dangers from women and their doctors” (Dow Chemical Hid Dangers).
Carolyn Haltrecht’s had cancerous cells in her nipple ducts so a surgeon removed both of her breasts. When she left the hospital she was satisfied but when she took off the bandages she was disappointed about the way they looked. She didn’t go in for any kind of reconstruction because she said that she didn’t want it to affect her life. Later on she noticed her self feeling depressed because she saw other women with breast and cleavage she used to have. So she decided to go through reconstruction. The danger of silicon gel was circulating widely so she went to a doctor that reconstructs breast from a women’s own body fat (Nemeth, Mary).
Reconstruction by using the woman’s own body fat is dangerous. First, the surgeon opens your abdomen and cuts through your muscles. They have to redirect your arteries and take the fat out. Then, the surgeon reconstructs their breast with the fat. As Carolyn Haltrecht said, “It took me the whole summer to admit to myself that I’m not very happy with the way I look and there’s nothing wrong with plastic surgery” (Nemeth, Mary). According to Marcia Angell, “Polls indicated that the great majority of women with breast implants were pleased with the results” (Angell, Marcia).