Dr. Piro’s Liposuction techniques
Fluid Injection, a technique in which a medicated solution is injected into fatty areas before the fat is removed, is commonly used by plastic surgeons today. The fluid — a mixture of intravenous salt solution, lidocaine (a local anesthetic) and epinephrine (a drug that contracts blood vessels) — helps the fat be removed more easily, reduces blood loss and provides anesthesia during and after surgery. Fluid injection also helps to reduce the amount of bruising after surgery.
Large volumes of fluid — sometimes as much as three times the amount of fat to be removed — are injected in the tumescent technique. Tumescent liposuction, typically performed on patients who need only a local anesthetic, usually takes significantly longer than traditional liposuction (sometimes as long as 4 to 5 hours). However, because the injected fluid contains an adequate amount of anesthetic, additional anesthesia may not be necessary.
The super-wet technique is similar to the tumescent technique, except that lesser amounts of fluid are used. Usually the amount of fluid injected is equal to the amount of fat to be removed. This technique often requires IV sedation or general anesthesia and typically takes one to two hours of surgery time.
Ultrasound-Assisted Lipoplasty (UAL). This technique requires the use of a special cannula that produces ultrasonic energy. As it passes through the areas of fat, the energy explodes the walls of the fat cells, liquefying the fat. The fat is then removed with the traditional liposuction technique.
Labels: liposuction, plastic surgery, surgeon, surgery
When pressed about it, he'd ask, "Would you rather wait for twelve people with one item or one person with twelve items?" Presumably, there was a lesson being taught about not letting the attention-grabber cloud one's vision of the overall deal. From there, a corollary could reasonably be drawn that certain things, if delivered unsatisfactorily, will never justify having chosen the lower price.
performed in the United States. The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery reports that over 10 million surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures were performed in the U.S. in 2008, as opposed to just over 2 million in 1997. So does this mean that plastic surgery has become as routine as grabbing a burger at the drive-up window?
that is reached primarily through hard work and discipline.
During the aging process, wrinkles, lines, and puffiness around the eyes contribute to a tired or aged appearance. Since the eyes are among the first things noticed about a person, it stands to reason that, whether the eyes look old and tired or young and energetic, judgments about the eyes will extend to the person. Eyelid surgery (known as blepharoplasty) is a procedure performed to give the eyes a visual pick-me-up.