Monday, October 26, 2009

Top Plastic Surgeries for men

Accredited to The Mail-online

Men are fuelling the latest boom in cosmetic surgery in their search for perfection.
These days, it’s not just women who are opting for a nip or tuck. In the past five years, the number of men turning to cosmetic surgery has risen by more than 300%, according to the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS).

Figures for men using Botox are even more startling – one in 10 of his Botox clients are now male. And, thanks to the arrival of Dysport, the male Botox injection, these numbers are set to increase again. Dysport does away with the spookily surprised look that isn’t quite so fetching on blokes, giving a heavier, Gordon Brown-style brow instead.

Other popular procedures include nose jobs (rhinoplasty), liposuction, eyelid surgery (blepharoplasty), ear correction (otoplasty), facelifts and neck-lifts. In fact, the surgery-lite business is booming. Procedures for men, such as silicone calf implants, are given equal billing with those for women. “Tattoo removal, hair restoration, laser hair removal and glycolic skin peels are top of the popularity chart.”

Last year, there was a 60% increase in tummy tucks for men, largely as a result of weight-loss surgery that sheds the stones and leaves behind excess skin.

It’s hard to imagine John Wayne or Jack Nicholson toying with the idea of a spot of lipo and yearning wistfully for a baby-smooth forehead. So, why are so many men resorting to the scalpel – including, it is rumoured, George Clooney, who made reference to having an eye-lift last year?

Also, men are realising that problems they thought they were stuck with, such as gynaecomastia [man boobs], are actually treatable.” “Men are vain, and they are becoming much less self-conscious about procedures,”

“Men are often more anxious, too, so that might make them more susceptible to pain. They often want more pain relief.” A couple who both came in for liposuction. The next day, she was up and about, but he was still lying there and really struggling. That’s not unusual. Some men are a bit wussy: they have ‘man recovery’, in the same way they have ‘man flu’.” Some men scar more easily, too. “Men have thicker skin,” “If it is thinner, you get a finer scar. With facial surgery, the key difficulty is deciding where to hide the scars without hair and make-up to cover them.”

When it comes to liposuction, men opt to have it on the waist, abdomen and chest, which can cost from £3,000 to £6,000. The procedure doesn’t work for beer bellies, as they are caused by fat underlying the muscle, but it does work for man boobs, something that more than 30% of men have. Treatment involves liposuction to remove excess fat, and then removing the gland under the nipple. It costs about £4,000, and the patient can be back on his feet in a few days.

So, what’s the future? With an ageing, youth-obsessed culture, most surgeons expect to see more men coming in for surgery, and less furtiveness about booking a fortnight off work to have a spot of lipo or a facelift. And given the male propensity to boast about just about anything, a new nose or a brow-lift could soon rival the MacBook Air in the status stakes.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Technology Trends in Cosmetic Surgery

Technology Trends in Cosmetic Surgery

The cosmetic surgery market has a strong emphasis on the creation and development of advanced methods and techniques. The following are the improvements in technology that is characterising the market at present:

Cosmetic surgery is now much safer and highly effective as patient healing times are much faster. Previously, facelifts and liposuction were the only options available to cosmetic surgery patients as consumers were more hesitant to adopt other untested and unproven methods perceived as 'high-risk' or 'alternative' options such as botox, collagen fillers, chemical peeling and aesthetic lasers. Currently with vast improvements in technology, these procedures are deemed to be relatively safe and have an added advantage of reduced after effects of physical trauma.

In the current climate the consumer's focus is on enhancing their features as opposed to actually changing it and the preference is towards more minimally invasive methods.

Facial fillers are the most common option to a non invasive and simple surgical procedure that is safe and risk aversive. As the name suggests, the facial filler concept does not pull the face tighter in an effort to reduce wrinkles but instead uses an acid that when injected fills out parts of the face that are sagging. Marks and blemishes on the skin caused by acne or chicken pox can also be treated to improve features.

The other popular and non invasive and non expensive method of intervention is botox that serves to help relax facial muscles and erode wrinkles gradually with time.

There is significant progress in the sphere of laser technology for cosmetic surgery with a novel concept of delivering energy below the skin. Technology improvements now mean that a tiny laser incision can rapidly and efficiently melt the fat below the surface of the skin.

The introduction of the concept of 'natural' cosmetic surgery involves the usage of stem cells that are extracted from the patient's body and reintroduced to the system in a manner that these cells have the ability to regenerate. This technique produces more natural and relatively pain free results as it avoids the usage of silicon and scalpels. Hormone regeneration is another technique that cosmetic surgeons have adopted as it a therapy that administers hormones that works in reversing the ageing process. The therapy is based on the treatment of premature ageing as a deficiency disease.

Conclusion

Cosmetic Surgery is a constantly growing and evolving market. The key characteristics of the industry are that it is primarily an elective, non essential procedure. But social acceptance based on the consumer's broader spectrum of choice as well as an increase in disposable income has facilitated a notable increase in demand for technologically superior surgical and non surgical options and interventions within this sphere.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

When Large Breasts Are Not Desired

Source: In and Out Star

All the adults in this wide world are probably aware of the fact that breast augmentation plastic surgery technique or what is colloquially known as 'boob job' is one of the things extremely many women would like to have done on their bodies. While some of them fear going under the knife, most of them would be eager to face the pains and possible risks just to become bustier and thus gain a lot more sex-appeal. This is exactly why over the last years there has been much fuss about this technique, about its safety, how it affects a woman from both a physical and an emotional point of view and also about the increasing numbers of females who had become or want to become its clients. As I was saying, all these facts are common knowledge for almost any adult nowadays. But if there's been so much talk about breast augmentation technique, only little has been discussed about its opposite, the breast reduction intervention and this is just too bad, because this can actually bring a lot of both physical and emotional benefits to small-figured women.

Let us just think about it, because this is not at all difficult to imagine: suppose you are a little lovely lady that weighs just a tad more than a child in his 14 and who has been endowed by nature with some large breasts. These would look really great on a medium-sized woman, but for you they are too big and this not necessarily from an aesthetic point of view, but from a physical one. Due to their elevated weight, your breasts hurt when you are not wearing a bra and just because they are heavy and you are supposed to carry them around everywhere you would go, your are also having some terrible back aches. Plus, as much as you would like to jog, this is not exactly a possibility for you, as your twins would keep bouncing and bouncing and keep you from getting a proper run. Plus, you will always have a hard time finding fitting bras and tops. Now, what would yo do if you were in this situation? Wouldn't you like to get rid of the literal toll large, alluring breasts put on your every day life and instead have them 'trimmed down'?

Just in case you are actually among the little women with a big bosom and your assets are giving you headaches frequently, then you should know that medical experts and plastic surgeons recommend breast reduction method, as it provides you with many health benefits. A study in this concern has also been led a few months ago by researchers at the NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and the New York University School of Medicine and they came up with the same findings - that women in this situation would really find it relieving if they had their breasts up to 500 grams lighter.

"Smaller women are going to have proportionally smaller breasts, but for their particular frame, their breasts may still be far too large and uncomfortable", explained Dr. Jason Spector, a plastic surgeon at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and assistant professor of plastic surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College, who took active part in the study. He also added that besides other benefits they got from the breast reduction intervention, women "were also greatly relieved that they were more able to engage in healthful activities such as running or playing sports-demonstrating that breast reduction surgeries have even wider health implications."

Add to the reason mentioned by the medical expert above some other very important benefits such as the fading away of the neck, back pain, headache and continually feeling uncomfortable in bras that are too weak to sustain such a heavy load. All these make breast reduction technique a procedure meant for functional, rather than cosmetic purposes.

"The smaller-framed woman who comes to us complaining of chronic breast-linked pain is not having this procedure done for a 'lift' or any cosmetic purpose. Breast reduction surgeries involve some scarring, general anesthesia, and the usual level of surgical risk. Patients are not taking them lightly", pointed out the team of experts who carried out the study. "Women come in all shapes and sizes, and we're just pointing out that breast reduction-like many other surgeries-is definitely not a one-size-fits-all proposal."