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Silicone implants - they're still dangerous
A
surgeon who's enlarged the breasts of thousands says that despite FDA
approval,
silicone implants still aren't safe. By
Edward Melmed, MD
THE
FRIDAY before Thanksgiving, all U.S. plastic surgeons received a
congratulatory e-mail from the principal manufacturer of breast
implants. Why
not celebrate? It's big money for easy surgery — and a lot of women
want to look like the thin but big-busted women they see in lingerie
catalogs and on "reality" TV shows. I seem
to be one of the few plastic
surgeons who won't be getting out the champagne. At
age 32, she had had at least three breast surgeries, and each time her
breasts became rock-hard and painful. She could not lie on her stomach.
We replaced the silicone with smooth saline implants. Within a short
time these too became hard, as did the next set. To my
surprise, she
looked terrific — normal, albeit smaller — and she felt better. Paula's
problem turned out to be common: Most breasts with silicone gel
implants become hard with time. It's
called capsular contracture. All
foreign objects in the body get encapsulated — just as the tissue
around a splinter gets hard — until the foreign body is removed. Women
with capsular contracture often end up with disfigured breasts and pain. When I
removed the implants, the cavity was filled with gooey,
liquid silicone that had ruptured; there was virtually no implant wall
left. We are
still
not sure of all the places where the micro-droplets of silicone end up,
though I have found it in lymph nodes. The
new generations of implants, we are assured, are
less likely to rupture. However, this claim has been made for every
previous generation. To monitor women's health, the FDA will require
women who receive implants to have regular MRIs and has recommended
that the implants be replaced every 10 years. It is
a pity that women
will become the experimental lab rats for these implants. They, not the
manufacturers, will have to pay for the MRIs and replacements as
recommended. Most
plastic surgeons vehemently deny any connection
between health complaints and leaking silicone implants. But I have
seen a disturbing number of patients with symptoms, including fatigue,
short-term memory loss, joint and muscle pains, skin rashes, disturbed
sleep patterns, depression and hair loss, that clear up when implants
are removed. According
to the
manufacturers' own literature, one in four women has additional surgery
within the first year. Many women have multiple surgeries. At
current implantation rates, these
devices will be in the bodies of 5% of U.S. women within a decade. As I
now see it, grossly outsized artificial breasts are a deformity that
flouts medical standards and even the plastic surgeons society's own
definition of "cosmetic" — all too often encouraged by the media, which
celebrates these water balloons for self-esteem. But
let's raise a glass of bubbly for the manufacturers
and the plastic surgeons. This will be a happy and prosperous year, for
them.
Edward Melmed, MD is a plastic surgeon in Dallas. ~ ~ ~
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