Three dimensional imaging for breast augmentation - A useful tool or just another marketing ploy? Part II
Monday, November 2nd, 2009Part II – How three dimensional imaging is used in my breast augmentation practice
When I see a patient in consultation for breast augmentation, I inquire as to what the patient is looking to achieve. I examine the patient and make recommendations as to what implant I think is best for them. The exact details of how I do this are beyond the scope of this blog, but suffice it to say, I determine what I think is the best implant to fit a particular patient’s tissues. I then have a discussion with the patient about what implant I recommend. The next question is invariably “what will I look like?” I told them that it is very hard for me to answer that question. Due to the nature that the implants conform to the body’s contours, you cannot put an implant in your bra, or a bag of water or rice. In my opinion there really is no way to see how you will look. Maybe you can get a very cursory idea of size, but I caution them that this, too, is highly inaccurate. So it comes down to a matter of trust. The patient just has to trust me that I will take into account the cup size she wishes to be, mindful of the fact that cup size is not a standard volume as “cc’s” are. You don’t buy a container of milk in A, B, C, D, or DD size. You buy a half pint (for your coffee), pint, quart, half gallon or gallon. These all have defined numbers of cc’s in them. For instance, a quart is 948 cc’s. Implants come in cc’s not cup sizes. The actual cup size is the sum total of how much tissue you start with and how many cc’s of implant you add later. The same implant can look very different in three different women.
I have had the opportunity to be the first in Suffolk County, NY to have a computer system capable of three dimensional imaging and surgical simulation. I have since taken the liberty of introducing the system to my breast augmentation patients who have had their surgery performed prior to my having such technology available. I have posed the following question to many of these patients: Prior to your undergoing breast augmentation surgery, did you have any visual image in your mind as to what your surgical result would look like. Having spent a fair amount of time with my patients in consultation prior to surgery, and that included either reviewing photos of similar patients who underwent breast augmentation or having the patients view such patients on my web site, I was very surprised with what they all (and I mean ALL) told me: all of the two dozen or so patients I queried told me that they had absolutely no idea what they were going to look like after surgery. They told me that they just “trusted me”!
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