Archive for February, 2010

Face Transplant Surgery Sought By UPMC Doctors

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Surgeons at UPMC are seeking approval for a “face transplant” operation that restores a normal appearance to a patient who has experienced severe facial trauma.  You may remember the near-total face transplant performed by surgeons at the Cleveland Clinic in 2008.  The operation required 22 hours and a large, multi-skilled team of physicians.

Now according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, doctors and plastic surgeons at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center are seeking approval to perform a similar operation.

The surgeons evidently have experience with hand transplants — procedures that require advanced techniques to reconnect tissues, veins and blood vessels.  A face transplant however, would have different cosmetic goals and could require donation of organs that are difficult to procure.

Read more on pittsburghlive.com

Can a Man Benefit From Tummy Tuck Surgery?

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Reading about abdominoplasty online, you might get the impression that only owensborowomen benefit from the procedure. In fact, men who have experienced dramatic changes in body weight are often excellent candidates.

Unfortunately, some of those men may feel hesitant about investigating the tummy tuck and talking to cosmetic surgeons. One man who documented his experience online said he perceived a “stigma or shame associated with male tummy tucks,” saying he was “initially embarrassed” when he first made inquiries about the operation.

A good surgeon will have experience and advice to share about abdominoplasty for a male patient. On RealSelf.com, a man asks about the procedure:

I’m dealing with loose skin after a 50 lb weight loss in my teens. I’ve totally transformed and I’m very athletic with well-defined abs, but [skin] laxity mostly below the navel and around the lower back. The problem areas are very localized and I hide it under the belt line, and even under form fitting swimwear, with no one suspecting I was obese. But I feel “unfinished.” The front skin is very thin and hangs, the back is mostly smooth. Is there a tummy tuck technique that would excise the abdominal skin and provide modest tightening in the lower back?

Dr. Chris Hess, a plastic surgeon practicing near Washington DC, answers “even though we (men) tend to have better skin tone than women, we can still end up with excess skin due to skin memory. It sounds like you could undergo a mild excision of the excess tissue – less than a mini tummy tuck.”

However, in cases where the male patient has experienced a greater weight reduction, the full tummy tuck may be recommended. Dr. Angelo Cuzalina, an Oklahoma cosmetic surgeon writes “Do not hesitate to use a full abdominoplasty for a male patient with extreme skin laxity. Men tend to heal better than women after abdominoplasty.”

This comprehensive approach may be optimal in many cases to provide the results men expect. In Cosmetic Surgery Times, Dr. Alan Matarasso, scientific editor of Aesthetic Surgery Journal, says “you really need to treat [men] circumferentially, all the way around, because if you ask most men what bothers them, it’s the ‘love handles,’ and that goes all the way around to the back.”

Clearly, many plastic and cosmetic surgeons can offer specific advice for men considering abdominoplasty. If you think you might benefit from the procedure, don’t hesitate to ask a qualified surgeon for more details.

The Importance of Nutrition in Cosmetics

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Last Wednesday, bloggers at Daily Beauty commented on a new study about the role nutritionof lycopene in skin health. Apparently, new research conducted in Berlin suggests a correlation between smoother skin and lycopene, the carotenoid found in tomatoes.

But aside from just lycopene, what is the relation between diet and healthy skin and how important is it?

Nutritionists say the relationship is very important. Every day, our bodies naturally exhibit evidence of our lifestyles as a cell-level battle is raging within each of us — a battle between the natural process of aging and the natural systems that help us resist that very process. Many other nutrients play a critical role in maintaining healthy skin.

  • Protein is essential for skin repair.
  • Thiamine is a B vitamin that helps skin cells function normally
  • Vitamin C helps the body naturally manufacture collagen
  • Zinc assists epidermal cell growth

Nutrients help us maintain resistance to the processes commonly associated with aging, and those nutrients reside in the foods we eat. So if you’re trying to look as young as you feel, good nutrition is the obvious starting point.