When many people think of “plastic surgery”, they think about facial procedures, such as rhinoplasty or facelifts, so it came as a surprise when the arm -liftings – have made recent titles for the exponential development of popularity.
Bragmoplasty surgery remodeles the upper arm and minimizes the so -called “bat wings” by removing excess skin, resulting in smoother skin and milder appearance. More than 15,000 Women have undergone bracelets last year – an increase of more than 4,000 percent since 2000 and I think it will continue to grow.
Facial aesthetic procedures can be placed in one of two conceptual categories – interests, patients looking for bracelets may fall into one:
- The reconnection processes change the basic shape of the structures. Rhinoplasty, otoplasty and the increase in chin alter the shape of the nose, ears and chin, respectively.
Patients who have lost large amounts of weight to improve their bodies often remain with a stretched and defruded skin envelope. Cataloplasty (abdomen) and masticity (breast lifts) remove the skin to improve abdominal or breast contours. Rocking improves the outline of the arm. Similar to patients seeking face contour procedures, those looking for bracehomoplasty after weight loss may be young or middle -aged.
Patients whose skin has lost age elasticity are other candidates for bracelets. These patients have normal body weight and have the “bat wings” due to the effects of gravity and structural deterioration of the skin over time. These patients want their weapons refreshing. Surgery is similar for both groups with the exception that weight loss patients often require a little liposuction to improve the result.
One of the interesting things about the bracelet is approaching surgeons to hide the resulting scar – surgery is an invasive procedure that requires an incision from the armpit to the elbow. Candidates for the procedure may be wondering: “Willn’t it seem obvious that I have surgery when I was wearing a top of the tank?
Those who have seen the successful results after the brush-fracture, however, know how discreetly a specialized surgeon can hide his intersection lines. It is true that all surgical incisions result in scars. Plastic surgeons make their scars less visible and, ideally, they are not visible in different ways. They place incisions in indistinct parts, such as behind the ears for neck lifts and folds lid for eyelash.
The long cut for the bracelet, from armpit to elbow, is hidden by placing it on the inner side of the arm next to the body – where no one can see it. You can see before and after examples of successful bracelet procedures in this collection of photos from American Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Company
Smart incisions can help ensure that increasing patients undergoing bracelets is only felt in statistics provided by plastic surgeons, not obvious scars. As with any successful plastic surgery, only the patient and the surgeon should know.
