Here are some frequently asked questions and information that you may find useful if you are considering Breast Augmentation. If you have any questions about this, or any other procedure offered by Auralia Cosmetic Surgery Clinic, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Working from the inside out, on top of the ribs are the chest muscles or 'pecs'. On top of these is the breast tissue then a layer of fat, then the skin. Breast implants can be placed either under the chest muscles or in front of them but still behind the breast tissue. Since in both cases the implant is behind the breast tissue there should be no interference with subsequent breast-feeding. There are advantages and disadvantages with both placement sites. For example, saline breast implants in front of the muscle is more likely to have visible rippling than if placed behind. This is because if it is behind the muscle there is more of the patient's own tissue between the implant and the skin to conceal it. This is especially important in thin women with the saline implants.
A breast implants placed under the muscle will generally have a more gradual 'take off' at the top edge of the implant giving a smoother silhouette and minimising the very round tennis ball appearance often seen on TV's Baywatch. Some patients benefit from a special technique called "dual plane" in which the implants are placed half under and half in front of the muscle.
We offer all types of placements and will listen carefully to the description of the look you want and advise on which placement will be most likely to give it.
All surgery, including cosmetic surgery, carries risks. Although the vast majority of breast implants patients do not suffer complication and are very happy with their results, you should not undergo breast augmentation without the risks having been explained to you. There are two types of risk; those who apply to any operation, such as bleeding, anaesthetic risk, and wound infection; and those that apply only to breast implant surgery. You must discuss these at length with your doctor at the end of your consultation, an information sheet about the risks to take away and consider carefully at home. The following explains some but not all of the risks specifically associated with breast implants

- Leakage - If saline leaks the salt water is absorbed into the body and there is no health risk. The breast implants can be replaced. If liquid silicone leaks, there can be problems with inflammation and even scarring in the breast. Therefore we only use the cohesive gel silicone implants which have virtually eliminated this risk.
- Breast implants infection - An infection involving the surface of one of the breast implants will probably need removal of the implant and a settling down period of about three months before the implant is replaced. The final result should not be affected.
- Capsular contracture - for reasons that are not known the tissues which form around the implant, and which are normally not visible or palpable can shrink making the implant feel hard. A mild degree of this would probably be accepted by most patients but in the severe cases where the implants can feel like a stone revision surgery will be needed. The overall risk of problematic capsular contracture with textured implants is usually quoted as about 5 % but with smooth implants it is substantially higher. If capsule contraction does occur it may be treated successfully by a course of tablets for 3 months. If this doesn't work further surgery is needed and then implants will feel soft again. In a small number of women the contraction can happen again. For a women considering a breast implant the risk of being a patient who gets recurrent capsule contraction is about 6 in 1000.
- Cancer - There is no increase in the risk of death from breast cancer in women in any kind of breast implant. Indeed, studies have shown a reduced risk of breast cancer in women with silicone berast implants. Breast self-examination and mammograms can be performed effectively in women with implants.
- Sensation changes - Temporary sensation changes in the breast skin and or nipples are common after implant surgery. In the vast majority of patients sensation will return to normal over the period of months. There is a small risk of a permanent loss of sensation which could involve the nipple.
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