Dermatology
Dermatology is the branch of medicine dealing with the skin and its diseases, a unique specialty with both medical and surgical aspects. A dermatologist takes care of diseases, in the widest sense, and some cosmetic problems of the skin, scalp, hair, and nails.
Dermatologists have been leaders in the field of cosmetic surgery. Some dermatologists complete fellowships in surgical dermatology. Many train in their residency on the use of Botox, fillers, and laser surgery. Some dermatologists perform cosmetic procedures including liposuction, blepharoplasty, and face-lifts. Most dermatologists limit their cosmetic practice to minimally invasive procedures.
Mohs surgery focuses on the excision of skin cancers using a tissue-sparing technique that allows intraoperative assessment of 100% of the peripheral and deep tumor margins developed in the 1930s by Dr. Frederic E. Mohs. Physicians trained in this technique must be comfortable with both pathology and surgery, and dermatologists receive extensive training in both during their residency. Physicians who perform Mohs surgery can receive training in this specialized technique during their dermatology residency, but many will seek additional training either through preceptorships to join the American Society for Mohs Surgery or through formal one- to two-year Mohs surgery fellowship training programs administered by the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Procedural Dermatology is concerned with the study, diagnosis, and surgical treatment of diseases of the skin and adjacent mucous membranes, cutaneous appendages, hair, nails, and subcutaneous tissue. Dermatologic surgical procedures are minimally invasive and may be safely in outpatient settings without general anesthesia or other intravascular physiologic alteration. An especially important technique is Mohs micrographic surgical excision, cancers of the skin and incorporates training in clinical dermatology and dermatopathology as they apply to dermatologic surgery.
Laser resurfacing is a technique used during laser surgery wherein dissolution of molecular bonds is by laser. It is for the treatment of wrinkles, solar lentigenes, sun damage, scars, stretch marks, actinic keratosis and telangiectasias or "spider veins". It can be with liposuction to remove excess fat from the chin and jaw area. Laser resurfacing can help tighten and smooth over the new contours.
Q: Will insurance cover plastic surgery procedures?
A: There is a distinction between cosmetic and reconstructive surgery. Most insurance do not cover cosmetic surgery to reshape normal structures in order to improve the appearance and self-esteem of a patient. Insurance covers reconstructive procedures on abnormal structures on the body caused by birth defect, cancer, trauma, infection or disease.
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Capsular Contracture IV
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Stage four capsular contracture describes a breast implant, which is firm to touch with visible breast deformity and, most importantly, breast pain. Stage 4 capsular contracture can occur anytime after breast augmentation. Patients may experience a firm breast implant from one week to a few decades after breast augmentation surgery.
Breast Lift Complications
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Breast lifts can results wide or raised scars, altered nipple sensation, asymmetry in breasts, and enlarged areolas.
Breast Reduction Complications
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Beyond the complication of any breast surgery such as infection, pain, and bleeding, breast reduction complications include loss of shape, re-growth of breast tissue, loss of nipple sensation, and the inability to breastfeed.
Browplasty
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Browplasty denotes plastic surgery on the eyebrows. A browplasty lifts eyebrows to rejuvenate the face. Aging causes the entire body to droop or gravitate downward. A female browplasty lifts the eyebrows to a naturally youthful position.
Silicone Breast Implant Bleed
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Liquid silicone or silicone gel can bleed or leak out of an intact breast implant shell. A silicone gel bleed is only present with silicone implants and an MRI can diagnose a leak.
Silicone Gel Bleed
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Silicone can leak out of the implant without an obvious rupture of the shell. A slow silicone leak occurs through an intact shell.
Capsular Contracture I
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Stage one capsular contracture is essentially a normally soft breast implant. There are no signs of any breast implant hardening. The breast implant can move comfortably inside the breast implant pocket. Breasts are not painful and not tender to touch. Visible or palpable ripping of the breast implant shell may be present.
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