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When There is a Need for a Do-Over in Plastic Surgery
By Dr. R. Jarial | November 3, 2009
No face-lift stops time, so as aging continues, even a satisfied patient may choose to have another one a decade later. But what if your face-lift never pleased you, not because of complications or monstrous scars, but because of aesthetics pure and simple? Perhaps your first surgeon’s technique resulted not only in a tighter jaw line, but also a flat wind-swept cheek and a stretched mouth. Or your nose no longer has an unsightly bump, but now, postsurgery, is asymmetrical.
These days, there’s such a critical mass of plastic surgery patients dissatisfied with their results that many doctors market secondary surgeries, or re-dos. It’s not hard to find surgeons’ Web sites that describe in detail how an asymmetrical nose job or an unsatisfactory face-lift can be righted.
No organization tracks how many procedures are done to correct cosmetic work. (Muddying the situation is the fact that some doctors tweak their own work if it falls short of the patient’s goals and that some complications call for immediate reoperation, like a hematoma, or a collection of pooled blood, beneath a closed incision.)
In this still-shaky economy, cosmetic surgery is down, and revisions for unhappy patients are included in that slump. But doctors who do a lot of revision face-lifts and nose jobs (two common redos) say demand for those operations is still strong.
Reasons vary, depending on the procedure. Rhinoplasty, for instance, is tricky because surgeons can’t control healing or how good the building materials are. Cartilage can be too thick or too flimsy; skin draped over a newly fashioned nose structure might not shrink to the shape the surgeon wants.
Sometimes earnest miscommunication between patient and doctor is at the heart of the matter. “What the patient is seeing in their mind is hard to describe to the doctor,” said Dr. Jack P. Gunter, who devotes 40 percent of his nasal-surgery practice in Dallas to redos. “Patients will say, ‘I just want a little taken off.’ How much is a little?” Other doctors sweet-talk patients into thinking the perfect nose or face-lift is within reach, leading to discontent. “People are marketing things they cannot achieve,” Dr. Gunter said. These days advertising creates unrealistic expectations, said Dr. Grotting, whose practice is in Birmingham, Ala. The idea that a procedure can be quick, simple, painless, “all of these catchphrases are heavily marketed to plastic surgery patients,” he said.
In summary, surgery is not always an exact science. Providing informed consent and taking the time to thoroughly explain a procedure with its potential risks and benefits are always important.
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