periareolar mastopexy
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2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aska Arnautovic ◽  
Justin M. Broyles

Mastopexy and mastopexy-augmentation are commonly performed surgeries to lift ptotic breasts while improving breast shape and volume. Factors that cause breast ptosis include aging, hormonal changes, and weight loss. Common surgical approaches for mastopexy utilize the periareolar, vertical, and wise techniques. All of these techniques incorporate parenchymal rearrangement in addition to skin envelope resection in order to achieve the patient’s aesthetic goals. A plastic surgeon should carefully select the appropriate mastopexy technique based on a patient’s preoperative grade of ptosis, breast shape/volume, and aesthetic goals. Many of these mastopexy techniques can be combined with implant augmentation, either as a single or two-stage procedure in appropriate patients with volume concerns. Revisions tend to be more common after implant-augmentations and may be necessary based on patient concerns and surgeon discretion.  This review contains 5 figures, 5 tables, and 14 references Keywords: mastopexy, mastopexy-augmentation, breast lift, breast ptosis, vertical mastopexy, periareolar mastopexy, wise pattern mastopexy, breast surgery


2019 ◽  
Vol 39 (9) ◽  
pp. 953-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan E Austin ◽  
Maryam Saheb-Al-Zamani ◽  
Frank Lista ◽  
Jamil Ahmad

AbstractThe authors describe their surgical technique for single-stage periareolar mastopexy with subglandular breast augmentation. They have performed this procedure in 85 patients since 2009 and found that this operative technique has allowed them to achieve reproducible outcomes in a single-stage procedure. Periareolar mastopexy with subglandular breast augmentation is an excellent procedure for patients who desire a larger breast size and who present with mild to moderate nipple ptosis with a paucity of excess skin in the lower pole of the breast. This article will review the perioperative management and detailed steps of the procedure and outline its indications for utilization and some of the common complications the authors have encountered.


Author(s):  
Alberto Rancati ◽  
Claudio Angrigiani

2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (02) ◽  
pp. 172-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Moltó-García ◽  
María Eloísa Villaverde-Doménech ◽  
Virina González-Alonso ◽  
Francisco Ripoll-Orts ◽  
Eduardo Simon-Sanz

ABSTRACTBackground: Periareolar augmentation mastopexy is one of the most demanded operations at Plastic Surgery clinics. Nevertheless, it is one of the leads of malpractice claims in United States caused by the high patient expectations and the standard surgical techniques which may result in common complications. The aim of this report is to present a new surgical approach to solve these complications. Methods: After establishing a working hypothesis, we performed a revision study of our patients and we came to the following conclusion: in order to perform a periareolar mastopexy for ptosis correction, breast has to be tuberous at any level and to have abnormally short inferior pole. These findings may explain the main complications from periareolar augmentation mastopexy with the standard surgical techniques. Consequently, we started a prospective observational study including 56 patients following a new surgical technique which deals the cases as tuberous breasts. Results: During three years, fifty-six periareolar mastopexies were performed with this new surgical approach with one year follow-up. No major complications were observed and 40 of the patients (71%) described the results as very positive. Conclusion: “If a periareolar mastopexy can be performed, then it must be a tuberous breast”. According to this, a new surgical technique for periareolar augmentation mastopexy has been developed obtaining an improvement in our surgical results and achieving a totally different view on this pathology, which has not been reported in literature yet.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 851-853
Author(s):  
Alexander Bogdanov-Berezovsky ◽  
Vasileios A. Pagkalos ◽  
Yuval Krieger ◽  
Yaron Shoham ◽  
Eldad Silberstein

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