A list of puns related to "Capsular contracture"
Hello ladies and gents. I was diagnosed with stage 3 grade 3 PR/ER+ HER2+ IDC in February 2020. I am 32/F. I was given the works for treatment and was given the all-clear from my oncologist this past May. Now that I am not actively in treatment, I have had time to digest some of what I have gone through. I didn't once cry or mourn while going through or treatment - it almost felt like I was witnessing a stranger or a movie character go through their ordeal. Now that I have had time to ponder, I realize that I am deeply unhappy with my left breast reconstruction. I had a bilateral mastectomy in August 2020 with immediate latissimi dorsi reconstruction with implants. I had it removed prophylactically. I have developed a capsular contractor (which my plastic surgeon has been avoiding label which I can only imagine is for egotistical reasons). My breast is nearly rock hard and painfully darts out to the side of my chest. I have been offered a revision by the same surgeon and have an appointment on August 19th. I am so frustrated that I am considering going flat. I don't know if I can make a clear-headed decision anytime soon. I was so busy surviving this past year and a bit that nothing phased me before and now things seem to be hitting me like a shit ton of breaks. I don't know what to do.
I have capsular contracture on one breast which makes my nipples look really wonky and has created a “band” near my armpit. My surgeon said I could try massaging. I’ve tried a bit but it hasn’t helped. Has anyone had success with massage or another option? Is there something specific you did? We are talking about another fat transfer in a couple of years but I would love to try to help it in the meantime. Thanks!
P.S. I’m not sure if I needed to, but I just noticed I didn’t specify this is a result from breast implants!
I am 3 months Post BA and my surgeon just diagnosed me with Baker Grade III Capsular Contracture in my right breast. It sits about 2 inches higher than my left breast, and sort of bulges out but is not hard to touch. Honestly I still mostly love the way they look other than the asymmetry and don’t feel any pain, and I am reluctant to undergo surgery again so soon. However, I do not want to harm my health or suffer further aesthetic complications down the line. My surgeon recommended trying to massage the right breast daily for 2 months and checking back in to see if it improves. Otherwise, he will give me a quote for revision surgery.
What should I do? I honestly would rather not have a revision BA unless the capsular contracture is harmful to my health. How bad is Capsular Contracture for my health and do I need to undergo revision?
I can't do this story justice without it being long.
Please, Please, Please, practice good breast implant maintenance. They aren't lifetime devices. This means Scheduled MRI's and Mammograms. You may not notice when your body starts having a reaction to the implants. I didn't. It can be a long gradual progress that you attribute to something else before you have issues with pain, fatigue, capsular contracture, swelling and more. I had all these issues and still didn't attribute them to the downhill trajectory of my overall health over a good portion of 2020.
So, I wasn't expecting to feel any different once the breast implant issues I was having were resolved. As bad as I had been feeling for months on end, I hadn't even considered that my sagging health, fatigue and depression might be directly related to the problems I'd been describing to my IU-health doctors while asking them for help. Despite my hard and swollen breast implants may be a sign that my body was having a reaction to the implants.
Finally, getting nowhere, I requested a mammogram.
My Primary Care Dr. at IU-Health for more than a decade responded by telling me in writing that he wouldn't stop me from getting a mammogram but he wouldn't provide a referral for one. When I questioned this decision he claimed there was no medical evidence to support the need for mammograms for Trans-women. When I pointed out this was outside the guidelines from Fenway Health, Callen-Lorde AND others including the WPATH guidelines that they claim to use. He also responded by telling me that the WPATH "Guidelines" were just that --guidelines. For the record, I should mention that he had provided two mammogram referrals since 2017. Neither of those referrals I could attend due to GRS complications. For me, this sudden change in mammogram compliance by my PCP came out of nowhere --and at the worst possible time.
Once he invalidated me as unworthy of a mammogram, I went into advocate mode. I found the peer-reviewed research that was more than adequate to justify the evidence-based need for a Post-op, 56 year-old Trans-woman who has been on HRT for the last 18 years to have her very FIRST mammogram. Plus I had to get angry about it. This is the state of my LGBT/Trans-healthcare at IU-Health in Indianapolis Indiana. The saddest part of all of this nonsense was all he had to do was look and feel my breast to see all the evidence any physician would need to see why a mammogram or an MRI was necessary
... keep reading on reddit ➡Hello,
My fiance has recently began noticing one breast grow and become firmer. It seems she is having another capsular contracture, her last one was roughly 2 years ago and had the implant replaced which until now fixed the issue. She initially had the surgery about 5/6 years ago. After speaking with her surgeon in Czech Slovakia he has recommended trying a Bio Lamp by Zepter; he says that if the issue has occurred for less than a month then there is a chance to heal the breast just buy using this. Wanted to know if anyone from this forum knows of or has used this product and knows whether it actually works?
There’s been a very large shift away from implants recently due to attention being drawn to BII on social media and women coming out with their horror stories about implants. I would like to know does anyone have any positive stories? How long have you had your implants? Are they fake looking or natural? Thanks!
I recently had my breast augmentation done by Dr. Chettawut. I am a week out of surgery and very pleased with how things are coming along, my standard of care in Thailand and the Dr. himslelf.
My only issue has been with the instructed breast massage routine. Dr. Chettawut has advised I do a routine that includes placing both hands over my breast and leaning with my body weight against a wall for five minutes of continuous pressure. I am then to change sides and repeat and do this over and over for 30 mins. He has instructed me to do this three times a day for a total of 90 mins of massage and to continue this routine for a full year before slowly decreasing it.
I am finding this routine is extremely time consuming, painful on my hands and exhausting on my legs. I have looked around at advice for breast augmentation massage and it seems that every source I can find on the topic advises a much less rigorous, much less time consuming routine.
I am deathly afraid of risking capsular contracture. And I am willing to tough it through the next year of my current routine if that is the only way to prevent my breast implants looking horrible.
But I was wondering if anyone had any information of Dr. Chet's process. Does he use a different kind of a implant that required this rigorous process? Is it absolutely necessary for ensuring my breasts turn out okay? Are there any better routines? For other than have had a breast augmentation with Dr. Chet what has your experience been like?
I have recently had a bilateral mastectomy and tissue expanders put into place. I am worried about capsular contracture on my breast that was previously radiated. There are already spots that are indented and very hard in that breast only a few days after surgery. Is there any way to reduce this risk and/or reverse it?
Anyone have experience with (what appears to be) a minor capsular contracture? Sub-Muscular Silicone (Natrelle Inspira) will be re-done but it will need to be above the muscle now (or so I’m told). Who’s been through this and what’s the outcome. Love them now but they need repair 3 years later.
Hi everyone,
I had breast augmentation surgery 1,5 years ago and it feels like i am developing capsular contracture in both, but even more so on the right side.
so my question is for those who experienced the same:
what were the early symptoms?
what did it feel like?
is it possible to develop it in both breasts?
what did you do to fix the situation?
Thank you! :)
Recently since October I had gotten BA and I was happy with the results, however my surgeon didn’t tell me getting under the muscle could affect what exercises I can do in the gym & didn’t really explain to me well the things like capsular contracture.
I know this is very specific but I heard from anecdotes that working out shouldn’t be a problem, and the statement of “after 6 weeks you should be able to return to regular physical activity” but from others saying you should avoid strenuous physical exercise, or you should never do chest exercise with them as it can cause animated deformity of the breasts. I’m unsure if regular physical activity is physical training that isn’t deadlifts, squats and bench press, Olympic movements, CrossFit, etc, or if it’s going to work. And from the crowd that’s saying chest exercise, what about exercises where the chest is activated with other muscles (shoulder press, pull-ups, certain core exercises, etc)
I took a 3 year break from going to the gym since my transition and my body is taking a toll. If any of y’all got sub-muscular what do y’all recommend to work with it?
I agree with the rules that we shouldn’t make fun of anyones plastic surgery choices but I do think it’s helpful for us to discuss complications that can happen. A lot of women don’t understand certain things are quite common and some surgeons don’t discuss because they want money. Earlier I saw a post about Lexi Deyoungs implants that I am quite sure got deleted by mods. She absolutely has capsular contracture. It’s when the your body forms a capsule that hardens and contracts around the implant. It eventually will become painful. I don’t think we need to make fun of her for it because it’s beyond her control and she needs a revision done. It’s all in how your body reacts to the implant and won’t go away without a new set of implants.
If anyone has any questions they would like me to ask Dr.Elist let me know. I have my final appointment with him today at 1100 PST.
Had another post op appointment the other day. They were placed under the muscle. Noticed about a month ago that you can literally see a bold outline of my implant because its dropping too low behind my breast tissue. Its making me look like i have two breasts on my left breast and it looks really bad. No capsular contracture at all but I’m afraid this needs to be corrected surgically. He told me to wear a support bra and that I’m steal early in healing and my skin still stretching. I’m too insecure to even show my partner my boobs cause they look bad.
Can anyone shed advice on this?
When people end up looking too unnatural, how does that happen? Do they ask for too much from the surgeon? Are the surgeons just cheap or bad? As far as injections go, do many people try DIY?
Edit: Thank you everyone for your answers and for sharing your personal experiences. It was all very helpful!
Hi !
I'm sure this is not at all the first of questions like this - but I wanted to hear from you all. I've had two surgeons recommend me different things, one under and one over. I already have breast tissue (like a B cup), little muscle definition and I'm not very active. I'm interested in overs because I want them to move and bounce, to interact with gravity, and also sag with my breast tissue as I age. Fat grafting is part of my insurance plan so I plan to have them covered with fat as well, using slightly smaller implants than I might have if I just did implants.
My concerns with unders are them being too high or creating that kind of pec-y look and feel and being masculinizing, not moving enough, and the distortion factor. For overs my concerns are mostly about capsular contracture and looking / feeling natural. Please advise !
I’m so depressed and anxious and wish I never got my implants. I’m 5 weeks out (May 14 surgery date) and I am almost sure I have cc in my right breast. I don’t want to go through surgery again and might just have them completely removed.
I have been so depressed since I got 410cc gummy bear implants last month. The pain was very bad in one of my incisions (I posted before about it) and my doctor told me I was “just not good with pain”. The incision pain finally subsided after a 3 weeks. And btw I’ve had several tattoos 2 natural births to name a few painful experiences that didn’t phase me. The incision pain was unbearable and concerning and I still feel like my incision has issues as that’s where the cc seems to be forming.
Not being able to exercise or take care of my house and family has left me very depressed. My right breast just doesn’t look or feel right and seems to me to have the signs of capsular contracture only based on my own Internet research. I’m worried I’ll need revision and I’m worried I’ll have to pay for another surgery.
I have a 45 day insurance which ends next week, but I’m worried my surgeon will shrug off my concerns until after the policy expires and I’ll end up paying for another surgery. I have so many anxieties and fears and pain and I just wish I never ever had this surgery.
Does anyone have any words of encouragement or advice? I emailed my surgeon this morning about my concerns. Since I brought it up within the 45 days, should I be covered by the policy even if I can’t get in to see my surgeon to be diagnosed before the end of the policy? I’m a nervous wreck.
https://preview.redd.it/9xoqiw5filo71.png?width=597&format=png&auto=webp&s=506d1ef6ce8d7b30623786b12442e28b59612c0f
For most women, breast augmentation using silicone or saline implants is not a viable option, whether for medical reasons or due to personal preferences. However, recent developments in fat grafting technology have introduced an array of breast augmentation procedures such as autologous fat transfer to breasts in Los Angeles that broadly use a person’s own body fat to naturally increase the size of their breasts by 1-2 cup sizes. Now, in this post, we have given an overview of the 4 most important factors associated with autologous fat transfer to breasts in Los Angeles for our reader’s reference.
Size
Breast size is by far the most important characteristic that dictates the end result of a breast augmentation procedure. This is because breast enhancement procedures are carried out only after understanding a patient’s anatomy and the degree of naturalness they expect in the final results. Likewise, many women usually want an enhanced breast appearance without the results looking overly large. In such a situation, itis important that an experienced plastic surgeon educates the patient how different breast augmentation procedures will alter their physical appearance.
Surgical Incision
There are commonly four types of incisions- transaxillary, inframammary, areolar, and trans-umbilical breast augmentation. The periareolar and inframammary are the two most common types of incisions mostly used by surgeons while trans-umbilical breast augmentation and transaxillary incisions are quite uncommon in nature. Now, the type of incision used by a surgeon in a big way depends on the comfort of the patient and the choice most suited based on a person’s health condition.
Surface
Women who opt for breast implants usually have the option of choosing between breast implants with either a smooth surface or a textured surface.
1) Smooth implants have over the years shown a slightly lower rupture rate and usually last longer.
2) Textured implants are designed in a way that reduces the chance of capsular contracture.
3) Textured implants have a thicker shell than smooth implants which generally makes textured implants feel firmer.
4) If the implants are placed in a submuscular space, then the rate of capsular contracture is broadly the same wi
... keep reading on reddit ➡Hello gents. 1 1/2 weeks into the upgrade procedure and I was curious about capsule formation.
https://www.realself.com/question/charlotte-nc-long-capsule-capsular-contracture-form-implant
Although this is related to breast implants, this capsule actually forms around silicone breast implants as well.
This is just a forum, but the research I have done estimates that capsule formation occurs around breast implant immediately after the surgery and usually completes in 4-6 weeks.
So I speculate that the swelling in and around the penis is actually the necessary immune system response along with the formation of the capsule around the silicone implant.
Which is why it subsides around weeks 6-8 because the capsule has then been fully formed.
I also speculate that with increased sexual activity, your body continually adds this structure to the necessary areas along the implant that are frequently rubbed against during sexual/masturbatory activity. Think of Calluses in your hands and elbows.
Thoughts?
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