If there were one best answer to each question, all breast augmentation would be done the same. If you are considering breast augmentation, you probably have a lot of questions, questions that need answers before you decide to have an augmentation. Most patients begin thinking about this procedure and, hopefully, soon realize that they’ve more questions than answers. How much does it cost?
How large should I be? What is the ideal place to put the incision? What’s the ideal type of implant? How do I find a good surgeon? How does that surgeon do the procedure? How long will I be off work? When can I return to normal activities and exercise? How long until my breasts look natural? Surely, there is one best answer to each of these questions for each individual.
You are an individual different from Other Women. In reality, the answer to each of these questions is the same, It depends. If there were one best answer to each question, all breast augmentations would be done the same. You are an individual, different from each other woman.
Your tissues are different, your breasts are different, and your desires and expectations are probably different. Ask yourself, do I want a rubber stamp, standard augmentation, or would I prefer that every aspect of my augmentation be tailored to my specific desires and my tissues? If given a choice, do you buy the same size and style of dress that you think other women would purchase or wear? Of course not, and it’s not logical to think that the ideal choices in breast augmentation for your friend who had the procedure are necessarily the best choices for you.
If a surgeon does all breast augmentations the same, the surgeon is probably doing a lot of them wrong. No two women are the same. Their tissues are not the same. The ideal breast for each woman isn’t the same. How do you know what’s best for you? You start by asking the right questions.
If someone you know has had an augmentation, have you seen the result? Do you care about it? Even if you do, are your tissues exactly the same as her tissues before she had the operation? If not, your result won’t be the same either
A common practice by surgeons, implant manufacturers, and World wide web Web sites is to show photos and imply, even with disclaimers, that you can look at photos and choose what type or size implant might be ideal for you. If you see pictures in a magazine of breasts that you like, can you take the photos to a surgeon and expect to get the breast that is pictured? Not if you or the surgeon are very sophisticated.
Can you manipulate images on a Web site or a surgeon’s office personal and reliably predict how your tissues might respond to a certain type or size of breast implant? Can you make good choices based on pictures? The answer is no, but you should understand why it is impossible to logically compare what you’d like to have to any picture, whether it’s in a magazine or on the World wide web.
Is the woman pictured your age? Did her breasts start out looking like your breasts? Are your pregnancy histories similar? Is the picture taken to enhance the look of the breasts? Has the picture been retouched? Most importantly, you can’t stretch the skin in a picture, and skin stretch is one of the two most important factors that determine optimal implant size to avoid tissue damage while optimizing the aesthetic result. You cannot accurately judge the width of the breast in the picture, and breast width is another critical factor in choosing an optimal implant that’s compatible with your tissues. If a surgeon asks you to bring a picture and casually assures you that you will get that breast or if the surgeon asks you to stuff trial implants or bags into a bra the size you would like to be, beware! If you see photos on the World wide web, and anyone implies that you can even remotely make decisions based on photos, beware! Using photos to help understand what you like is logical, but you should thoroughly comprehend all the factors that make you different from the woman in the picture and understand and accept what your individual tissues will grant you to have.
The same is true for trial implants or bags of fluid in a bra. The bra is not your tissue. It doesn’t respond to the presence of an implant in the same way that your tissues will respond. A bra never stretches in response to an implant like your tissue stretches. A bra doesn’t predictably age and stretch more with time as your tissues will age and stretch. Did your surgeon discuss all of these issues with you? More importantly, did your surgeon discuss how your choices now might affect your breasts in the future as you get older?
About the Author
Dave Stringham, the President of LookingYourBest.com writes about plastic surgery in Dallas, Texas and plastic surgery procedures such as Dallas breast augmentation, rhytidectomy, breast augmentation, rhinoplasty, abdominoplasty, and liposuction.
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