Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Announcing The Weekender Lite Laser Peel!

Summer is almost here and we are down to down to the wire for skin care that requires a fair complexion! Luckily, The Weekender Lite Laser Peel is here just in time to perfect your complexion. Deanna is a 27-year-old patient who wanted to undo years of sun damage and improve her skin’s tone and texture. The Weekender was a perfect fit!

Before
After
The Weekender is a moderate laser peel that requires 3-5 days of social downtime, which is customized to meet your individual needs. You can apply makeup on day 3, allowing you to recover over a weekend and return to work on Monday looking refreshed and renewed.

Watch Deanna’s progress over the course of a week:


Immediately after treatment
Day 1

Day 2

Day 3
 
Day 4

Day 4 with makeup

Day 7

After her peel, Deanna invested in a new SPF to protect her glowing complexion over the summer months.  Concannon Plastic Surgery offers free consultations so you can find out if The Weekender is right for you.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Human "Ken" doll on Barbie Valeria and his obsession with going under the knife

From The Sun, By ASHLEY VAN SIPMA

YOU might have thought when Justin Jedlica first laid eyes on real life Barbie girl Valeria Lykyanova it would have been a match made in doll heaven.

 But instead, it was a match made in plastic surgery hell.

Justin, who has spent over $100,000 to look like a human Ken, has revealed his female counterpart is 100 percent fake.

After meeting Valeria, 23, for the fist time last week, Justin admits that she is an 'illusion and a fake Barbie'.
Anything she can do, I Ken do better ... Justin Jedlica with Ukrainian Barbie Valeria Lukyanova
Justin said: “Her hair is fake, her lips are drawn on and she insists on having tons of extra lighting in the room to make her skin look porcelain white.

“But in reality, when you wipe away all that make-up you just have an average-looking girl next door.

“Unlike me, who has spent a fortune crafting my body to permanently become a human Ken doll, Valeria is simply an illusion and a fake Barbie.”

 He said: “I was very tall and thin and a bit awkward as a teenager and was always a bit of a loner.

“I had gaps in my teeth, I wore huge bifocal glasses because my vision was so bad and I was forced to shave twice a day because I had so much facial hair.

"I hated school as I would get bullied about my looks and as time went on I became more and more determined to change everything about myself. "

Flipping through fashion magazines and tearing out pictures of exotic looking models, Justin created his own idea of beauty by piecing together the perfect body parts.

Justin would even draw eyeliner on his face and use make-up to create shadows as a mock up of what he wanted to look like.

 He said: “When I was 14 I started drawing pictures of what I wished I looked like with a thin pointy nose, flat forehead and blue eyes.
Pre-surgery ... Justin Jedlica before his rhinoplasty
“I would even photo copy pictures of myself, alter them with pencils and erasers to make myself look more attractive.

"As time went on I began to realise more and more that my ideal look was actually Barbie's boyfriend Ken."

Unlike most kids Justin’s age, who had posters of pop stars hanging on their bedroom walls, Justin’s room was plastered with pictures of models like Gisele Bundchen.

He said: “I remember one time bringing a picture of Gisele to my mom saying, 'Mom, this is the nose I want!'"

'Plastic surgery has brought me a lot of happiness' ... Justin Jedlica
While his mother has been supportive of his decision to have surgery, Justin’s dad William, however, didn’t understand his son’s obsession, something which Justin reveals still causes tension today.

 Justin said: “My dad and I didn’t connect much when I was growing up"

“As his first son he was looking for someone to watch sports and play football with, but as an artist I was more interested in more creative activities."

“We didn’t really understand or relate to each other much on a personal level and though we’re on good terms today, we still don’t see each other very often.”

Finally, when Justin turned 18, the legal age in the US to have surgery without needing parental consent, he consulted a plastic surgeon in his hometown of Cary, North Carolina for a rhinoplasty.

It was the same plastic surgeon his mother Tanya had used the year before for a breast augmentation and seeing the success of her operation was the reassurance Justin needed to go under the knife.

In 1998 Justin took the plunge had his first nose job, using $4000 his mother had collected and saved over the years for him from birthday and Christmas gifts.

 Justin was so inspired by his surgeon’s work he went on to have his vision corrected four years later and spent $4000 on PRK laser eye surgery in 2002.'I've customised my body from head to toe, but I still want more' ... Justin

He also splurged $2,500 on teeth bonding and bleaching and his obsession for perfection has continued to escalate ever since.

Justin said: "I was hooked the first time I went under the knife and seeing the results just gave me an amazing buzz I knew I wanted to experience again and again.

“Fixing my nose was my main objective when I first started getting plastic surgery, but as I continued to learn about new treatment options I kept wanting more and more work done. It really is an addiction.

“Believe it or not with my nose, even after spending a total of $27,000 to getting it where it is now, I still don’t think it’s perfect."

 In addition to five nose revisions, Justin has spent $4000 on cheek and chin fillers, $3,000 on lip injections and $6000 on a cranial brown lift - spending over $60,000 on his face alone.

Justin, who has spent $16,000 on Botox, said: “Just like you routinely go to a dentist to prevent things like cavities, I get Botox four times a year to prevent wrinkles.”

Guys and dolls ... Barbie's boyfriend Ken was Justin's inspiration
But Justin’s maintenance routine doesn’t stop there.

For in attempt to reverse the effects of aging, he’s spent more than $15,000 on skin rejuvenation, chemical peels and full body laser hair removal.

 When it comes to Justin’s implants, however, bigger is better.

And an effort to emulate his idol Ken, Justin has spent a fortune building up his muscles.

In 2006 Justin had pectoral implants put into his chest for $7000 and three years later spent $13,000 on bicep and tricep implants.

He’s also had 13 rounds of fillers to plump up his gluteal region.

And most recently he spent $16,000 last December on a groundbreaking three-part shoulder implant surgery.

 Justin said: "People are quick to judge calling me superficial, ugly and even a freak, but plastic surgery has brought me a lot of happiness and I’m confident with who I am."

"My mum used to be a personal trainer so I would spend hours working out, but I haven't been to the gym in two years now as for me surgery gives much better results, which are permanent.

"To me I now have the perfect body and don't have to get sweaty every day."'I was bullied for my looks' ... Justin as a teenager

Incredibly, Justin has never had any health scares under the knife and has nearly 30 plastic surgeon contacts on speed dial across the nation.

 In fact, he’s even catapulted his plastic surgery obsession into a career as a plastic surgery consultant.

“For me, plastic surgery is short term pain for long-term gain.”

And according to Justin, he isn’t ready to give up his addiction to pain any time soon.

In fact, he has a long list of dream surgeries including quad and calf implants, abdominal implants as well as a surgery to permanently change the colour of his eyes which will likely set him back another $50,000 in total.

Fortunately for Justin, however, money isn’t an issue.

“Thankfully I have great friends who support me personally and a partner who helps support my surgeries financially.

“But of course with every procedure I’m accepting a certain amount of risk, especially when I’m put under anesthesia.'I've now got the perfect body' ... Justin Jedlica

“I realise I could die on an operating table and that something could go terribly wrong, but I don’t let that fear get in the way of pursuing my dreams.

Justin added: “I love the fact that I’ve had 100 different cosmetic procedures as it’s helped set me apart as a unique individual.

"Some people might say I look overdone, but really I'm just trying to look like an improved version of myself.

“I’m the only human Ken doll in the world and to me that’s quite an accomplishment.”

As pointed out in one of Concannon Plastic Surgery's prior blog posts, "The quest to look like somebody (or something) else is never going to be healthy."  The point and spirit of plastic surgery is for each person should be the best version of themselves, not be another version of somebody else. Each person has unique talents, abilities and appearance -- you should maximize that instead of hunting down a desire to look like (Angelina Jolie).

Someone who seeks out an extreme amount of surgery is a red flag for mental health issues, such as body dysmorphic disorder.

A person who has mental health issues with his or her body image will never feel satisfied, even after plastic surgery.  After having the procedures, they're not satisfied, they only feel worse. It's detrimental to have cosmetic surgery. There's no satisfaction. When there's no satisfaction, they go to another doctor and another doctor and the risk becomes higher."

The purpose of plastic surgery is to make people feel comfortable with who they are and copying a person's appearance "runs counter to what aesthetic surgery stands for.

People might look for extreme changes and what they do may go outside patient safety doing too much, too many things. It is part of a board certified plastic surgeon's duty to be cautious because their clients "may be requesting something psychologically and emotionally not healthy, but something that's dangerous."

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Disturbing rise of the G-spot jab: It's the latest cosmetic treatment that promises to pep up your sex life. But, warn doctors, it could do exactly the opposite


Dr David Matlock, a controversial Beverly Hills cosmetic gynecologist and co-star on "Plastic Wives", invented 'The G-shot'

from the Mail Online, By Leah Hardy


A nervous woman lies on a couch, stripped from the waist down. Standing before her is a white-coated doctor, brandishing a needle of hyaluronic acid.

It is about to be plunged into one of the most delicate areas of her body. The woman has already endured being probed by the doctor's fingers, suffered the pain of an internal injection of local anesthetic and the discomfort of having a speculum inserted.She is also more than $800 poorer. Yet she's still giddy with excitement because she's read that this procedure, humiliating and painful as it is, will transform her humdrum sex life by plumping her 'G-spot' with a cosmetic filler. And that with her newly enlarged G-spot, an area of sensitive tissue on the front wall of her vagina, she is likely to have multiple orgasms.

A flurry of newspaper articles on the practice have surfaced in recent weeks, but doctors and researchers are casting doubt on the validity of the G-spot injection, pointing out that it is not supported by any medical evidence or serious studies. In fact, they also warn it could harm women - and actually have a damaging effect on women's sexual responses.

Glancey Medical Associates in Essex, England has attracted a lot of attention for offering such injections. Owner Dr. Lucy Glancey introduced the injections three years ago.

Since then, she has performed 150 of these procedures. She first became aware of the procedure when she attended a medical conference where Dr David Matlock, a controversial cosmetic gynecologist, presented a lecture about his invention, 'The G-shot'.

'I was interested in it, so developed my own technique, which I tried on volunteers from my database of regular patients,' says Dr Glancey.

'That way I could be sure they were of sound mind, with no psychological issues. I evaluated the results and found a high rate of satisfaction.'

Dr Glancey says the procedure is 'safe enough' and that she takes an 'ethical approach' to her work.

But Dr Petra Boynton, senior lecturer in international healthcare research at University College London, describes the procedure as 'unsubstantiated by any serious research'.

Consultant plastic surgeon Paul Banwell, a member of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, who works in the NHS as well as privately, calls it 'gimmick surgery'. He adds: 'I don't offer it, I don't support it, and we just don't know enough about possible side-effects, such as scarring and a reduction of libido over time.'

Part of the problem with G-spot enhancement or 'amplification', is that many dispute whether the  G-spot exists at all.

It was originally described as a spot in the internal tissue behind the bladder. In 2008, Italian researchers claimed eight out of 30 women had thicker tissue at the front of the vagina, which could be detected in ultrasound and seemed to be connected to arousal.

But research is limited and contradictory. Some suggest the  G-spot could be part of the sensitive nerves of the genital area, others that it is tissue similar to the prostate gland in men.

Dr Boynton says: 'There's evidence indicating some women appear to have a sensitive spot in this area, but you aren't deficient if you don't have it. It's not vital for pleasure or orgasm.'

Dr Glancey, naturally, insists the  G-spot is a reality. 'It's not rocket science to find the specific tissues of the G-spot. Most women are aware of where the area is, I just confirm it.

'Once I've found it, I inject a lot of hyaluronic acid (around three times the amount used to fill nose to mouth lines) to raise the area up, so it's more easily felt. It's hard to ensure all the filler goes underneath the G-spot, so some doctors put filler into the structure on purpose to hydrate and plump the area, just as you would with the mouth.'

However, other doctors simply don't believe that injecting a filler made of hyaluronic acid can physically increase the size of the area, as Dr Glancey claims.

When lips are filled, it merely stretches the skin, but if the G-spot is a collection of sensitive nerve endings, you can't make them bigger with filler, and if it's glandular tissue, you can't make that bigger by putting filler under it - though you could raise the area up so it can be felt more easily.

'You cannot increase the size of the spot simply by putting filler into the flesh there,' says Dr Banwell. 'It's a myth and it doesn't even make sense. We also know that when you stretch flesh or skin it normally becomes less sensitive, even numb.'

He's particularly worried that doctors who perform the injections advise patients to return every four to six months to repeat the procedure (Dr Glancey says 60 per cent of her patients have returned for at least one further treatment).

'There are unknown dangers in injecting a synthetic material, albeit one that mimics something found in human bodies, into a very sensitive part of the female anatomy,' warns Dr Banwell. 'We don't know what the long-term risks and complications may be.

'If there are repeated injections into one small area, the effects may include scarring, alterations in libido and less sensitivity.

'We know from injecting facial fillers that even the act of injecting an area can cause scarring under the surface, which produces lumps and bumps under the skin. I think this has the potential to be catastrophic.'

Sceptics also point to the controversial reputation of the doctor who invented the practice. The 'G-shot' is a trademarked term belonging to Dr David Matlock, a self-promoting Beverly Hills plastic surgeon who describes himself as 'the pioneer of female genital plastic surgery'. He boasts: 'Medicine is a business. And sex sells.'

Dr Matlock insists that enlarging the G-spot (for, in his case, a $1500 fee) will make it easier to find and more sensitive for up to four months, until the fillers dissolve. So popular has this procedure become that doctors fly to Dr Matlock's institute on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles for a three-day training course that costs $55,000.

The American College Of Obstetricians And Gynecologists has issued a statement saying: 'So-called “vaginal rejuvenation”, “designer vaginoplasty”, “re-virgination”, and “G-spot amplification” are not medically indicated, and the safety and effectiveness of these procedures have not been documented.

 'Women should be informed about the lack of data supporting the efficacy of these procedures and their potential complications, including infection, altered sensation, painful intercourse, adhesions and scarring.'

Yet despite this, some 200 doctors from around the world have so far forked out for the privilege of learning how to administer the G-shot.

Dr Matlock's first British trainee and the first British doctor to offer the service was Professor Phanuel Dartey, a London-based gynecologist who opened his own centre in Harley Street, and introduced the G-shot to the British public in 2008. But there was a dark side to the seemingly respectable Professor Dartey.

While women told journalists how marvellous he was, his cosmetic gynaecology operations were quietly doing terrible harm to women.

In 2011, his license to practice medicine was taken away after 'effectively amputating' parts of one woman's anatomy during a procedure involving lasers.

Robin Knill-Jones, who chaired the General Medical Council's fitness-to-practise panel that made the decision to revoke his license, described it as a 'truly shocking case,' and added: 'In the panel's judgment there is a continuing risk to patients from the way Dr Dartey conducts his practice.'

Yet women claim G-spot injections revolutionized their sex lives.

Marie James, 42, an acupuncturist from East Anglia, who was treated at Glancey's clinic, said at the time: 'I wouldn't say I orgasm every time I have sex now but it's always great - and the idea that I can orgasm at all with sex is amazing.'

Surely that is evidence that it works?

Perhaps not. The truth is that any clinic will only pick success stories to talk to the Press, and when reporters tried to contact some of the women directly they were told they were unlikely to speak to them without being paid because they had been offered up to $1300 by magazines to say, in explicit terms, how their sex life had improved.

Jenny Davies (not her real name) had the G-shot jab some years ago and, at the time, claimed her sex life was transformed by it. Yet when we contacted her this week, she admitted the only reason she had it done was because she was helping a cosmetic surgery clinic to market its services - which might go some way to explaining her enthusiasm at the time. 'I'd never have it done again,' she says.

Dr Glancey says: 'I warn all my patients it has a failure rate of around 18 per cent.'

So if we can't trust these individuals' verdicts, can we at least be sure the treatment works for most women?

After all, in a pilot study commissioned and often quoted by Dr Matlock, the G-shot was successful in 'around  87 per cent of women'. However it has emerged that the study, which has never been published, was of a mere 20 patients, meaning that between 17 and 18 women claimed greater sexual satisfaction.

Professor Virginia Braun has been researching genital plastic surgery for more than a decade. She says: 'The evidence around this is very sketchy. All we have is anecdotal reports.'

Dr Banwell says: 'I suspect there is a large placebo effect, where women believe it will work, so it does work, but the difference is in their minds, not their bodies.'

Dr Boynton also believes many women feel embarrassed to admit the procedure was less life-changing than they'd hoped. 'They have spent a lot of money on the procedure so they have a big financial and emotional investment in believing it will work,' she says.

'Also, if they don't find it improves their sex life, but they hear success stories about wild sex with multiple orgasms, they are likely to feel inadequate and not want to say that, for them, it was rubbish.

'Women are led to believe this procedure is going to be the magic button that will enable something great to happen to their sex life, without the embarrassment of having a conversation with their partner.

'But talking, reading a self-help book or even seeing a sex therapist is far cheaper, probably more effective and less risky than having an invasive procedure. Part of the “success” of the G-spot injection is almost certainly the frisson of excitement of thinking about sex and what will happen later.

'But a fun trip to buy some sexy underwear may well have the same effect, is a lot cheaper, and a lot less painful.

The G-shot is NOT available at Concannon Plastic Surgery.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Surprising Statistics About Plastic Surgery

Adding up the numbers on cosmetic procedures:
(From the statistics compiled by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, from 2010 and 2011):

318,123: Number of breast implant surgeries performed in 2010

2,414: Number of those surgeries performed on patients 65 and older

4,153: Number of those surgeries performed on patients 18 and younger

84,685: Number of cosmetic surgical procedures performed on patients 65 and older in 2010 (including 26,635 facelifts and 24,783 cosmetic eyelid operations)

91: Percentage of cosmetic surgical procedures performed on women in 2010

184: Number of members of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) in 1967 (the year it was founded)

2,069: Number of members today

1.35: Percentage of members of ASAPS who are women

10,677,415,674: Dollars that Americans spent on cosmetic procedures in 2010

9,000,000:  The number of surgical and nonsurgical cosmetic procedures performed in the United States in 2011. Surgical procedures accounted for 18% of the total procedures and 63% of the total expenditures, with nonsurgical procedures making up 82% of the total number of procedures and 37% of total expenditures.

13:  From 2010-2011, there was almost a 13% increase in the total number of Liposuction procedures, with over 300,000 procedures performed. For the first time in three years lipoplasty has surpassed breast augmentation as the most popular cosmetic surgical procedure in the United States. Until 2008 liposuction had been the most popular cosmetic surgery procedure, but from 2008-2010 breast augmentation held that title.

197:  Since 1997, there has been over 197% increase in the total number of cosmetic procedures performed in the United States. Surgical procedures increased by more than 73%, and nonsurgical procedures increased by 356%.

The top five cosmetic surgical procedures performed in the US in 2011 were:

Liposuction (325,332 procedures);
Breast augmentation
(316,848 procedures); Abdominoplasty (149,410 procedures); Blepharoplasty (147,540 procedures);
Breast lift (127,054 procedures).

The top five nonsurgical cosmetic procedures performed in the US in 2011 were:
Botulinum Toxin Type A (2,619,739 procedures);
Hyaluronic acid (1,206,186 procedures);
Laser hair removal (919,802 procedures); Microdermabrasion (499,427 procedures);
IPL laser treatment (439,161 procedures).

10 Billion:  The amount Americans spent on cosmetic procedures in 2011. Of that total $6.2 billion was spent on surgical procedures; $1.7 billion was spent on injectable procedures; $1.6 billion was spent on skin rejuvenation procedures; and over $360 million was spent on other nonsurgical procedures, including laser hair removal and laser treatment of leg veins.



Thursday, January 24, 2013

North Korea Flips Out About Chinese Report That Kim Jong-un Got Plastic Surgery

From the Business Insider by Adam Taylor

Kim Jong-un
A report from a Chinese TV channel that suggested North Korean leader Kim Jong-un had undergone plastic surgery may have strained relations between the two countries.

Last week Shenzhen TV reported last week that a diplomatic source who had spoken to a North Korean official confirmed Kim had surgery six times in order to look more like his grandfather, Kim Il Sung, according to the AFP.

Despite a lack of evidence, there has long been been speculation about Kim's possible surgery. Kim Jong-un is widely considered to emulate his revered grandfather. The report soon spread amongst news organizations in South Korea.

On Wednesday North Korean state news agency KNCA issued a lengthy article rebutting the report and other rumors from foreign news sources. From the English-language KNCA website:

     "They even cooked up the story of "suspicion of operation" something unimaginable. This shows that they were overwhelmed and stunned by the sunny image of the great man of Mt. Paektu...It is extremely regretful that media of neighboring countries are playing into the hands of waiting maids for politicians."
Kim II Sung, revered grandfather

The North Korea response specifically mentions China, and the Chinese government appeared anxious to limit the fallout.

China Digital Times, a media monitoring blog that often posts leaked censorship memos, reports that two specific censorship orders have dealt with the report. According to the latest memo, Chinese media has been ordered to not "report, comment on, or redistribute stories about the personal lives of North Korean leaders (such as face-lifts)."

Xinhua, China's state news agency, has also carried out a thorough debunking of the plastic surgery story, according to South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo:

China's official Xinhua news agency on Wednesday went to some length to discredit reports that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has undergone plastic surgery to resemble his grandfather, nation founder Kim Il-sung.

A diplomatic source in Beijing said North Korea must have protested against the rumors reported in the Chinese press.

Xinhua had its correspondents in Seoul and Pyongyang trace the background of the story. According to the news agency, the rumor that Kim Jong-un has had plastic surgery six times to resemble his grandfather was first reported in Seoul, then picked up by a Chinese news website, and then reported as fact on Shenzhen Satellite TV.

The Pyongyang correspondent dismissed the rumor as unfounded with the unbeatable argument, "There have been no news reports in North Korea about Kim Jong-un's plastic surgery."

The agency said there is "nothing suspicious" about Kim resembling his grandfather since they carry same genes.

While Kim tries to dress, walk and smile like his grandfather, this just aims to give the impression that he "holds the people dear," Xinhua said. It added that in a widely reprinted picture on horseback Kim looks more like his father Kim Jong-il than like Kim Il-sung.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Journal Report Finds Patients Still Look Younger Five Years After Facelift Surgery

Study is first of its kind to use rigorous, standardized assessments to evaluate long-term follow-up results


More than five years after facelift surgery, three-fourths of patients still look younger than they did before surgery, according to a long-term follow-up study in the December issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).

Although some facial areas show signs of aging, a range of objective and subjective assessments demonstrate long-lasting results of facelift surgery, concludes the study by Drs. Barry M. Jones of King Edward VII Hospital, London, and Steven J. Lo of Canniesburn Plastic Surgery Unit, Glasgow. They write, "This study provides strong evidence that facelift surgery can provide significant long-term aesthetic gains."

Five Years Later, Lasting Results of Facelift

Patient after facelift at Concannon Plastic Surgery
Patient after facelift at Concannon Plastic Surgery

The researchers analyzed standardized photographs of 50 patients who had undergone facelift surgery an average of 5½ years previously. Three different sets of assessments were performed to determine how well the facelift results held up over time:
•  Objective measurements-such as jowl height and the angle of the chin to the neck
•  Subjective assessments of key areas-such as lines from the nose to mouth and mouth to chin
•  Overall subjective assessment-global score of the patient's appearance

All three sets of assessments showed significant improvement, although with some loss of improvement in the years since facelift surgery. On objective measurements, the improvement in jowl height decreased by about 20 percent during follow-up. There angle of the chin to neck showed even greater reduction, with 70 percent of the improvement being lost.

Subjective assessments also showed lasting improvement in key areas regarded as signs of facial aging-including lines running from the nose to mouth and mouth to chin. These improvements showed little deterioration in the years since surgery. Again, the loss of improvement appeared greatest in the neck area.

The overall subjective assessments strengthened the impression of general improvement. "Scoring suggested that 76 percent of patients will still look younger 5½ years after a facelift than they did prior to the facelift," Drs. Jones and Lo write.

New Evidence Will Help Guide Patient Expectations


The study was designed to help plastic surgeons answer one of the most common questions asked by patients considering facial rejuvenation: 'How long will a facelift last?' Drs. Jones and Lo write, "The longevity of facelift surgery is a key question that has not been adequately addressed by previous studies." Their study is one of the first to use rigorous, standardized assessments to evaluate the long-term follow-up results.

The results suggest that, more than five years after facelift surgery, "There is no significant objective or subjective sign of continued aging or 'relapse' in any area except for the neck." The researchers add, "The vast majority of patients will continue to look better several years after surgery than they did before."

The study provides plastic surgeons with an "objective and validated" baseline to compare the results of different surgical procedures, according to Drs. Jones and Lo. "Furthermore," they add, "this study also supports facelift surgery as the only rejuvenation technique to have objective and subjective evidence for long term efficacy, emphasizing the current lack of evidence of other interventions."

Friday, January 11, 2013

It pays to check your surgeon's credentials!


        Dr Gonzalez with his staff, accused of permanently injuring patients performing plastic surgery without training
Dr. Gonzalez and staff; he is accused of permanently injuring



From CBS Sacramento (Reporter: Kurtis Ming)

Patients say they were left deformed, even paralyzed at the hands of a Rocklin gynecologist turned cosmetic surgeon, an investigation has revealed. Dr. Efrain Diego Gonzalez started his Rocklin-based Advanced Medical Spa in 2007, where his low prices advertised online caught the attention of Northern California patients.

“It’s upsetting,” said Amy Rose, a 27-year-old single mother. Learning to write by hand all over again, Rose now lives with a paralyzed right hand. Now she struggles to tie shoes, pick up keys or even sign her own name, she said.

“That,” she said, after trying to sign her name on a blank notepad, “looks nothing like my signature.”

Rose said Gonzalez carelessly cut through two critical nerves during a breast augmentation — leaving part of her right hand completely numb and a noticeably different color than her left hand.

“You can’t feel anything right now?” asked investigative reporter Kurtis Ming, poking her hand with the end of a pen.

“No,” said Rose, telling CBS13 two neurologists have told her she may never regain full use of her fingers again.

Rose isn’t alone.

“I don’t even really like to get undressed in front of my husband,” said Hope Moon, a wife and mother whose surgery left her with a mutilated belly button and a massive infection, she said.

More than a year later, she lives with a nasty scar hip to hip.

“It’s just deformed looking,” she said. “It wasn’t what i was expecting at all.”

And there are others.

“I think something is very, very wrong,” said attorney Michelle Jenni, who represents 12 patients of Gonzalez, including one that no longer has a belly button after a tummy tuck, Jenni said.

“This is her belly button, where it should be,” Jenni said, pointing to pictures.

Another woman lost her nipple after a breast augmentation. “It got infected and fell off,” Jenni said.

According to Jenni, none of these patients knew Gonzalez’ background is in gynecology.

While Gonzalez claims on his resume to have taken numerous medical courses in cosmetic surgery, he was never formally trained in plastic surgery during his residency, which he admits in a deposition.

“Is it true that during your residency you didn’t have any training in cosmetic surgery?” asks Jenni in the August 1 deposition.

“It’s very true,” Gonzalez responds.

“Had they known what his real training was, they wouldn’t have gone to him,” Jenni said.

Plastic surgeon Dr. Terry Zimmerman leads the Greater Sacramento Plastic Surgical Society and has seen patients after Gonzalez operated on them, he said.

“He’s giving us a black eye,” Zimmerman said. “[Patients] are under the illusion that he’s a highly trained, well-respected plastic surgeon, but nothing could be further from the truth.”

Before moving to California, Gonzalez practiced cosmetic surgery in Puerto Rico, but his medical license was taken away in 2006.

Court documents show Gonzalez had “been practicing the specialty of Plastic Surgery without being certified as a Plastic Surgeon” as required by a new law in Puerto Rico.

The decision also mentioned “a patient may have died” following one of his treatments.

It may be the law in Puerto Rico, but here in Missouri it’s perfectly legal for a doctor to treat patients outside the scope of his or her training.

A foot doctor can perform brain surgery in their office, a pediatrician can do a heart transplant, and a cardiothoracic surgeon can perform a tummy tuck or breast augmentation.

Zimmerman thinks the law should be changed, he said, and he’s concerned doctors like Gonzalez could end up killing someone.

“We’ve brought it to the attention of the Medical Board, and they are investigating this surgeon,” he said. “But it is taking quite a long time.”

The State of California filed a complaint against Gonzalez last year for “gross negligence,” and “incompetence” involving another patient’s breast rejuvenation, but that case is not scheduled to go before a judge until August 2013.

Despite other women saying they too have complained to the Medical Board of California, the agency tasked with protecting the public, it has allowed Gonzalez to continue treating patients.

“If the Medical Board, with all the other complaints that have come before me, would have done something and taken away his license and shut him down, I wouldn’t be in this situation,” Rose said.

“You think the State could have saved you?” Ming asked.

“I do,” Rose said.

The Medical Board will not comment on open investigations.

In the deposition, however, he said he does more cosmetic surgery in the region than any other group, and he suggests this as the reason his competitors are critical of him.

“Since they know I’m a cosmetic surgeon, they’re going to say my work is bad because they don’t want me competing with them,” he said in a deposition tape obtained by CBS13.

“I’m a leader. There’s followers, there’s leaders. I’m a leader,” he said.

Dr. Terry Zimmerman, President of the Greater Sacramento Plastic Surgical Society, said Gonzalez is giving area plastic surgeons “a black eye.  It’s not a matter of competition here by any means,” Zimmerman said. “It’s a matter of patient safety.”

But women thought Gonzalez would make them feel better about themselves.

“I’m just thankful I got out alive,” Moon said. “I feel like my body is really — that it’s ugly.”

Rose had to figure out how to be a mom to a 3-year old using just one hand.

“I want to be able to take care of my son without it being a struggle,” she said.

Some patients now fear a lifetime of struggles for the way they say Gonzalez left their bodies.

“I just want my hand back,” Rose said.

Tips for Researching a Your Potential Plastic Surgeon:

There are several ways in which consumers can investigate doctors before undergoing any procedure:
1. Check the status of your doctor’s license.
2. Search for records of your doctor’s history, including if he or she has ever been disciplined by the Medical Board.
3. Check with the American Board of Plastic Surgery to see if your doctor is really a board certified plastic surgeon.
4. Search for legal records in Missouri. This includes lawsuits or arrests when searching under “Civil” and “Criminal.”
5. Ask doctors about their training, including residency in the specialty they are practicing and how many procedures they’ve performed.
6. Questions to ask your surgeon (BEFORE they operate on you).