Gynecomastia is the most common breast pathology. Numerous excisions and liposuction techniques have been described to correct bilateral male breast enlargement. Recently, there has been a shift from the open approach to minimally invasive techniques. This article reports a 5-year experience using laser-assisted lipolysis (LAL) to treat gynecomastia, and describes the surgical technique. Between January 2006 and December 2010, a total of 28 patients with bilateral gynecomastia were treated with LAL. Patients had a mean age of 36.5 years (range 24 to 56 years). LAL was performed with a 980-nm diode laser (continuous emission, 15 W power, 8-12 kJ total energy per breast) after tumescent anesthetic infiltration. The breast was evaluated objectively by two physicians who compared chest circumference and photographs. Patients were also asked to score the results using a visual analogue scale: 75 to 100 (very good), 50-74 (good), 25 to 49 (fair) and 0 to 24 (poor). The postoperative period for all patients was incident-free. After 6 months, 18 patients (64.3%) scored the results as "very good", 6 as "good" (21.4%), 3 as "fair" (10.7%) and 1 "poor" (3.6%). Mean chest circumferences pre- and postoperatively were, respectively, 117.4 ± 11.1 cm and 103.3 ± 7.5 cm (p < 0.001), corresponding to a mean difference of 14.1 cm. Physicians scored the photographs as "very good" in 22 patients (78.6%), as "good" in five patients (17.9%), and as "fair" in one patient (3.6%). LAL in gynecomastia is safe and produces significant effects on fatty tissue, with a reduction in breast volume, together with significant skin tightening. Provided an appropriate amount of energy is delivered by an experienced operator, the results are both significant and consistent.
The development of a prefabricated free flap that could have potential for tracheal reconstruction has been investigated in the goat model. Through a staged procedure, a composite cutaneous-chondromucosal premolded, prevascularized flap was obtained by prefabrication techniques. The procedure comprised three surgical stages. In the first stage, on day 0, the cartilaginous frame-work was constructed, along with the vascular pedicle (implantation of an arteriovenous fistula as a vascular carrier). In the second stage, on day 50, the inner surface of the neotrachea was lined with nasal mucosa. In the third stage, on day 60, the flap was elevated and free transferred to reconstruct a 15-cm circumferential defect in the cervical trachea. Ten animals were operated on, and the results were one infection, three early deaths, one free-flap failure with early tracheal stenosis, and five long-term survivors without significant stenosis. The structure of the neotracheal flap closely resembled that of the native trachea: internal respiratory epithelial lining, cartilage rings, and fibrovascular tissue. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy was done to all the animals at 10 and 60 days, revealing no significant stenosis in the long-term survivors.
Deepithelization of the breast in breast ptosis surgery is important, being associated with risks which could affect the clinical outcome. The role of Er:YAG laser deepithelization was investigated. A total of 12 bilateral mammoplasties were performed, randomly assigned to 2 groups, one of experienced and one of less-experienced surgeons. Results were compared between the 2 groups of surgeons for scalpel deepithelization on one breast and the Er:YAG laser on the contralateral breast. No complications; less edema, pain, and erythema; and quicker wound healing were observed in the laser-deepithelized breasts, with a shorter operation time even for the less-experienced surgeons. The authors do not suggest that the Er:YAG laser should replace the scalpel in the hands of the expert surgeon for breast deepithelization in breast ptosis surgery, but the results of the study suggest that Er:YAG laser ablation is a safe, precise, effective and complication-free method.
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