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Angioedema and Cosmetic Surgery

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Angioedema is rapid swelling (edema) of the dermis (deep skin), subcutaneous tissue (fat), mucosa and submucosal tissues (gastrointestinal or other hollow organ lining) that was first described in 1882. It is characterized by repetitive episodes of asymmetric swelling, frequently of the face, lips, tongue, limbs/hands or feet, and genitals that lasts 24 to 60 hours without itching or hives. In the gastrointestinal lining it can cause severe pain and increased girth with or without diarrhea or vomiting leading to unnecessary abdominal or gynecologic surgery. In the respiratory tract including the mouth and throat it can interfere with speech or swallowing and cause life threatening asphyxiation. In the urinary tract it can prevent urination. In the hands or feet it can preclude the use of the hands or ability to walk. In the face the eyes can be swollen shut.

Its prevalence is 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 50,000 individuals. It is classified as:
Acquired (swelling occurs over a few minutes)Hereditary(HAE)-genetic mutation and usually manifests in the second decade of life (swelling occurs over 2 to 8 hours)
immunologic-IgE antibody mediated allergies to foods, drugs or particles in the air like pollen, autoimmune and caused by the body's release of histamine or antibodies against the C1-esterase inhibitor proteintype I-decreased levels of C1-esterase inhibitor protein in the blood, 85% of hereditary type
nonimmunologic- side effect to certain medications, particularly Angiotensin Converting Enzyme inhibitors, NSAIDs like motrin, advil or aspirin, birth control pills containing estrogen, food additives that cause increased bradykinin levelstype II-dysfunctional C1-esterase inhibitor protein in the blood, 15% of hereditary type
idiopathic-unknown causetype III-abnormal factor XII in blood clotting cascade so it is more active
cancer such as carcinoid or blood cancers

HAE attacks are caused by the production of large amounts of bradykinin, that is normally broken down by C1-esterase inhibitor protein, in the bloodstream.

In the absence of C1-esterase inhibitor protein activity (the yellow dots) bradykinin production continues uncontrolled. FXII is factor XII a component of the blood clotting cascade. Bradykinin increases blood vessel diameter and pore size with leaking resulting in swelling of the tissue through which the blood vessels travel. It is so powerful that 1 microgram injected into the brachial artery increases arm blood flow 6 fold. Dental treatment, particularly tooth extraction, is a recognized trigger of HAE though symptoms may not manifest for many hours or even days after the procedure. A typical course resolves in 5 to 7 days, but in some patients, the clinical manifestations exist up to 6 weeks. Other known triggers are physical/psychological stress, fatigue, menstrual periods, pregnancy, trauma and having a breathing tube placed for anesthesia. 75% of patients with HAE have a relative who suffers from repetitive bouts of swelling. The remaining 25% are spontaneous without an affected relative. The diagnosis can be made by blood tests measuring the blood complement cascade proteins C1 and C4. Unlike allergic edema, HAE attacks do not respond to antihistamines, steroids or adrenaline including Epipens. The attacks vary in frequency, type and severity which contributes to delays in seeking treatment. 50% of HAE patients will have a laryngeal (voice box) attack within their lifetime, 40% of which are fatal if not treated emergently.

Between 2006 and 2010 there was a 27% increase in the number of patients admitted to US emergency rooms with angioedema probably due to increased use of medications that can cause it. 57% were female and 41% were African American. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-Inhibitor) medication used for hypertension is a known risk factor for the disease as it prevents the body's breakdown of bradykinin while having no effect on C1-esterase inhibitor protein activity. Most angioedema patients seek medical care a year after their first attack and are diagnosed after an average of 8 attacks and seeing 4 doctors. One survey revealed that it took 10 years for patients to get an accurate diagnosis after being diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome, allergies etc.

Once diagnosed, prevention becomes an essential part of angioedema management. Because trauma is one of the most common triggers, elective operations—especially head and neck surgery, cosmetic surgery, intubation for general anesthesia, upper endoscopy, bronchoscopy, or dental work are usually preceded by an increase in the dosage of medications, such as steroids and antihistamines, 5 days before surgery. Some protocols advocate the preoperative use of concentrated C1 inhibitor (icatibant), especially when emergency intervention is required. Icatibant has been proven effective and life saving in both acquired and hereditary forms of angioedema with subjective relief in as little as 20 to 30 minutes.

Among patients with ACE-inhibitor-induced angioedema, the time to complete resolution of edema is significantly shorter with icatibant than with combination therapy with a steroid and an antihistamine, 8 vs 27 hours. In HAE it would be prudent to normalize the blood complement proteins with icatibant prior to performing surgery. Should you develop an attack during or after surgery, especially of the respiratory tract, you will need immediate access to these medications and possibly Epipens. In rare cases access to fresh frozen plasma is required. So patients with angioedema should have their surgery in a hospital not a surgery center. Prior to surgery your surgeon, anesthesiologist and internist need to work together to make the process as smooth and safe as possible. IF YOU HAVE ANY RELATIVES WITH REPETITIVE SWELLING TELL ALL OF YOUR DOCTORS. If steroid medication is required you will need to take vitamin A, starting before surgery, to counter the adverse effect of steroids on the healing process.

Your regular health insurance may not cover these additional costs depending on the wording of your policy and whether they consider an angioedema episode a complication of cosmetic surgery since it can occur with or without surgery. In that case it may be prudent for patients in the US to pay for temporary insurance that would cover such complications just for the planned surgery and the immediate time after surgery.

Additional resources: 
 Icatibant  


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Tattoo Removal

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PicoWay tattoo removal laser (Syneron Candela) surveyed 250 people who had one or more tattoos removed and 100 people who were thinking about removing one or more of their tattoos between 9/29/2016 and 10/6/2016. 83% who had a tattoo removed were planning on getting a new tattoo and were more likely to do so because they know they have the option of removing it. 13% of this group had it removed because they had become parents. The most commonly removed tattoos were a person’s name. Symbols and animals came in a close second and third.

The person who removed the tattos was:

 Of the 100 contemplating removal:


Laser Tattoo Removal Success Rate

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Breast Implants and Breastfeeding

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Breastfeeding is a vital function for infant mother bonding, transmission of antibodies to the baby to fight infection etc. All women with breast implants and no other prior breast surgery giving birth at an Argentinian hospital between April 2013 and July 2014 were followed and compared to body matched mothers and babies. After giving birth those with breast implants had insignificantly lower success at breastfeeding at 30 days after giving birth than those women who did not have breast implants: 93% with implants vs. 97% without implants. Also, it did not matter whether the implants were placed via incisions in the crease under the breast or in the outer edge of the areola (skin around the nipple). Therefore we can conclude that most women can establish breastfeeding even if they have breast implants irrespective of how the implants were placed.

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Intra-Uterine Device (IUD) Birth Control and Plastic Surgery

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An intrauterine device is a small contraceptive device, often 'T'-shaped, often containing either copper or levonorgestrel, which is inserted into the uterus.
On its website, CNN (1/25/2017, Cohen) reports that since President Trump won the election, more and more women have been getting IUDs, or intrauterine devices, as they fear that getting IUDs will no longer be free after the ACA (Obamacare) is repealed. According to Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood, since early November 2016, the number of women trying to get into to get an IUD has increased 900 percent. Similarly, CNBC (1/25/2017, Mangan) reports on its website that from October to December 2016, doctor office visits that were coded for either insertions or management of intrauterine devices rose by about 19 percent. This was the first time in years that IUD procedures and follow-up visits increased in both November and December of a given year. The implications on women undergoing Plastic Surgery especially with the increasing popularity of fat grafting and dermal fillers is important.

Actinomyces odontolyticus, gram positive bacteria that grow best under low or no oxygen conditions, have been isolated in female genital tract specimens from 4.8% of women fitted with intrauterine contraceptive devices, in 4% of women with pelvic inflammatory disease, and in 1.8% of women without pelvic inflammatory disease. Because of their poor growth in the presence of oxygen it can be hard to culture or grow them from wounds i.e. you can be infected by them with cultures that show no bacterial growth. Culture requires immediate specimen transport and prolonged anaerobic incubation. They are soil and water saprophytes that live off decaying organic matter and grow in unbranched or branched filaments of cells the way mold grows.
Actinomyces
They form hard lumps in infected tissue that soften as they extend through the soft tissue forming multiple draining abscesses containing yellow colored granules composed of actinomyces microcolonies, cellular debris and associated microorganisms. These small granules may be seen as small masses on CT or MRI scans. In advanced cases they can destroy bone.
Actinomyces Infection
Actinomycosis infections are endogenous infections from mucous membranes i.e. you infect yourself. Since they live off decaying matter the combination of blood and injected fat is a perfect environment for them as some of the injected or grafted fat as in a Brazilian buttock lift is dying while awaiting for the ingrowth of blood vessels. When specimens are tested for their presence they are placed on blood agar gels because actinomyces thrive on blood. I am aware of one case where the actinomyces from an old IUD infected the buttocks after fat grafting - Brazilian buttock lift. After more than 6 months of treatment with multiple hospitalizations and operations that patient was left with deformed buttocks. Because the bacteria live off of dead tissue in areas of low oxygen and blood flow they can require 12 to 18 months of antibiotic treatment to clear.

 The published recommendations for actinomycosis prophylaxis are oral hygiene and regular intrauterine device replacement. A review of patients with actinomycosis infections revealed the average number of years that the IUDs were in place was 5 years. Therefore if you have an IUD and develop an infection after any surgery it is imperative that the IUD be removed until the infection is cleared. If you have an IUD that is 5 or more years old have it removed before you undergo any elective non-superficial surgery. This problem is just rare enough for there to be a delay in diagnosis which will result in deformities. Diagnosis is often delayed and the yellow 'sulfur granules' are helpful but nonspecific for this infection.

Most US health insurance policies have clauses that preclude coverage of cosmetic surgery complications or coverage of complications due to any non-covered procedure or surgery. Since the Affordable Care Act mandates coverage of Implanted contraceptive devices, like intrauterine devices (IUDs) all treatment related to IUD complications are usually currently covered except for employees of a "religious employer" who is exempt from mandated coverage of birth control. This will all change in the coming years with respect to IUDs but the exclusion of coverage for cosmetic surgery complications will remain.

To be forewarned is to be forearmed.

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Lentigo Maligna and Lentigo Maligna Melanoma

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Lentigo maligna is a melanoma in situ that forms in sun exposed areas of skin, first described in 1892. Under the microscopic one sees a proliferation of atypical pigment cells in the superficial skin. They typically have a cloud like appearance with variable shades of brown coloring and start as a freckle that enlarges over a number of years. Historically they were called Hutchinson's freckle. More than half occur on the face or neck. They are more common in warmer climates with greater sunlight exposure and the majority occur after the 6th decade of life . If ignored long enough they will develop a vertical growth phase and begin to invade the deeper layers of skin, dermis. They are then malignant melanomas and are called lentigo maligna melanoma. At the time of presentation 10 to 20% of lentigo malignas have already invaded the dermis to some degree. Although melanoma represents a small portion of all skin cancers, it is responsible for the majority of skin cancer–related deaths.

The diagnosis of melanoma of the lentigo maligna subtype is challenging, as the clinical presentation is quite varied, ranging from a subtle brown patch to tan/black or even amelanotic(almost normal skin color). These lesions pose significant treatment challenges for clinicians because of significant invisible to the eye surrounding extension, a predilection for cosmetically and functionally sensitive areas, and a naming system that is often confusing. Obtaining a biopsy specimen from a clinically suspicious lesion can present problems, given the lesions can be as large as 6cm in anatomically and cosmetically sensitive areas. If the suspicious lesion is small, an excisional biopsy of the entire pigmented lesion to fat is recommended. However, an excisional biopsy is rarely feasible, as most lesions are too large with poorly defined margins to be completely removed. In this setting, a small biopsy of the darkest, or most palpable, or otherwise most visibly concerning area of the lesion is recommended.


Non-surgical treatment methods including cryotherapy with liquid nitrogen, laser destruction, radiation therapy and topical immunotherapy with imiquimod have recurrence rates as high as 20 to 100%. Surgical removal is the treatment of choice for lentigo maligna/lentigo maligna melanoma but is more challenging than diagnosis because the margin between lentigo maligna and surrounding normal or sun tanned skin can be difficult to determine and the standard pathology method of bread loaf cutting the specimen or frozen section methods under estimate the extent of the condition. Also fat has to be removed with skin to make sure hair follicles that could be involved are included. The 1992 National Institutes of Health consensus statement advised that 5-mm margins at removal (removing the visible lesion with 5mm of surrounding skin) were adequate in the treatment of melanoma in situ, but this recommendation was based on melanomas on the trunk and extremities. In the head and neck region, however, multiple studies have shown that the standard 5-mm margins are inadequate for excising lentigo maligna in up to 50 percent of cases. Therefore the recommended margin for lentigo maligna of the head and neck is 10mm unless they are on challenging areas like the tip of the nose. This means the holes left after removal can be 2 to 4 times the size of what the patient sees as the skin lesion when looking in the mirror. That can be a large hole! Performing wide excision and immediate complex facial reconstruction for these large defects without knowing the margins are clear can frequently result in incomplete excision, risk for recurrence, and disease progression over time.

The solution to the treatment problem is a 2 staged procedure with clearance of the margins in the first procedure in a thin square, waiting for a pathology report on the specimen and then removal of the skin and fat within that margin at the second procedure. Typically a 2mm double blade is used to remove the thin square allowing en face examination by pathology instead of bread loaf examination. If the margins are not clear the first time additional stages are added removing thin squares at 5mm until the margins are cleared before performing the definitive removal.

Lentigo Maligna of the nose and 5mm margin for excision. 

Lentigo Maligna of the cheek 10mm margin for excision and flap for closure after removal.

Skin Cancer
Suntanning and Sunscreens

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Eyelid Surgery and Headaches

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There are different types of headaches including migraine, tension and cluster headaches. The causes of headache are as variable as the proposed treatments. Over the last 5 to 10 years plastic surgery in the treatment of headaches has become increasingly popular. This blog only deals with eyelid surgery and tension headaches.

Upper eyelid surgery can be cosmetic for the removal of excess skin or reconstructive to improve vision by removal of excess skin and/or eyelid ligament tightening . A cohort study of 108 eyelid skin  removal only cosmetic blepharoplasty and 44 reconstructive skin removal with eyelid drooping blepharoptosis procedures (cosmetic and drooping eyelid surgery) treated between September 1, 2014 and September 1, 2015 were compared using Headache Impact Test-6 scores before and after surgery.  The test scores are derived from questionnaires completed by patients. 35% of the skin only blepharoplasty and 64% of the visually impaired patients had tension headaches before surgery. The scores in the first group went from 56 to 46 and in the second group from 60 to 42 following surgery.
The conclusion is more patients with drooping eyelids affecting vision have headaches than patients who just want cosmetic upper eyelid surgery and though both groups have less severe headaches after surgery those whose vision was affected have more improvement. Additionally the more their vision was affected the greater headache severity they had before surgery and the more relief they had after surgery.

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Recent Research in Hidradenitis Suppuritiva

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Antibiotic Therapy for HS Can Induce Antibiotic Resistance
A cross-sectional analysis of 239 patients with HS evaluated from 2010 to 2015 compared use of antibiotics to no antibiotics with respect to the development of bacterial resistance to antibiotics.
Tetracyclines and oral clindamycin were not associated with any significant antimicrobial resistance. Therefore they should be used in preference to Bactrim, Ciprofloxacin and topical Clindamycin to treat HS related infections.
Fischer AH, Haskin A, Okoye GA. Patterns of antimicrobial resistance in lesions of hidradenitis suppurativa. JAAD. 2017;76(2)309-213.e2

Skin Microbiota is Altered in Preclinical Hidradenitis Suppurativa
Researchers compared armpit skin not involved with HS in 24 patients with HS to 24 people without HS. 50% of the samples from HS participants showed signs of low-grade inflammation compared with only 16% of controls but there were fewer bacteria and less biofilm on the skin of the HS participants not visibly affected by HS. Therefore the inciting factor of HS is likely autoimmune not bacterial infection from the outside and antibiotic use to prevent HS flare ups is not recommended.
Ring HC, Bay L, Kallenbach K, et al. Normal skin microbiota is altered in pre-clinical hidradenitis suppurativa. Acta Derm Venereol. 2017;97(2):208-213.

Ultrasound Evaluation May Assist in Staging HS Severity
Researchers examined 20 individuals with HS diagnosed lesions between January and September 2016 using high frequency ultrasound systems (UHF48 and UHF70 transducers with M-mode and Color Doppler mode). The ultrasounds showed widening of the hair follicles, thickening and/or abnormal echogenicity of the dermis, dermal pseudocystic nodules, fluid collections, fistulas and dermal sinus tracts connected to the base of hair follicles. They concluded that high frequency ultrasound can help to confirm HS diagnosis, assess the severity of the disease, improve the management of the patients and evaluate the therapeutic effects of systemic and local treatments.
Oranges T, Chiricozzi A, Dini V, et al. High frequency ultrasound in Hidradenitis Suppurativa [presented at the 75th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology]. Orlando, Florida. March 3, 2016.

HS Flares Are Often Heralded by Prodromal Symptoms
Researchers administered an extensive questionnaire including questions on the frequency, type and time of occurrence of the prodromal symptoms, and the degree of certainty of the perceived association to 72 patients with HS. 83.3% (60 out of 72) reported experiencing 1 or more prodromal symptoms prior to the development of inflamed nodules or abscesses. 45% indicated that the prodromes occurred more than 24 hours before eruption, while 20% indicated that they occurred 12-24 hours before eruption. In over half of these patients the symptom was fatigue or malaise which is likely related to immune system downgrading or upgrading.
Ring HC, Theut Riis P, Zarchi K, Miller IM, Saunte DM, Jemec GB. Prodromal symptoms in hidradenitis suppurativa [published online February 14, 2017]. Clin Exp Dermatol. doi: 10.1111/ced.13025.

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Laser Hair Removal and Hidradenitis Suppuritiva
Bandages and Dressings for Hidradenitis Suppuritiva
Hidradenitis of the Armpits

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Deadly Brazilian Butt Lifts

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In my previous blog Brazilian Butt Lift - Buttock Augmentation Implants and Injections I discussed the history of buttock augmentation, the surgery and illegal buttock injections by untrained individuals leading to loss of life. According to statistics from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) plastic surgeons, dermatologists, and facial plastic surgeons performed 18,487 of these procedures in the US in 2015 compared to 7,382 in 2011, a 150% increase over 4 years. The total from 2011 through 2015 is estimated at over 65,000. If other surgeons are included the 2015 total could have been as high as 23,000 and the 2011 through 2015 numbers as high as 100,000. In 2015 a buttock procedure (fat grafting, buttock implant or buttock lift) was performed in the US every 30 minutes of every day. Now as the procedure becomes increasingly popular with surgeons it has become obvious that this is the mostly deadly procedure performed by plastic and cosmetic surgeons.

To investigate this ASAPS created a task force, which surveyed, queried and interviewed medical malpractice carriers, state medical boards, individual plastic surgeons world wide, American medical examiners and U.S. autopsy reports in July 2016. 25 deaths associated with the procedure were confirmed by individual surgeons and medical examiners over the previous 5 years. 4 deaths were reported between 2014 and 2015 by the American office operating room accreditation entity AAAASF. That translates to 1 death every 2 to 3 months from this procedure. The very first case report of death following buttock fat injection due to fat travelling to the lungs (pulmonary fat embolization-PFE) was published in the pathology literature in 2015. I am also aware of deaths from the procedure due to puncture of large arteries or bowel with the metal tubes used to harvest or inject the fat. The ASAPS task force consisted of 11 surgeons, pathologists, and statisticians who limited their study to the risks of both fatal and nonfatal fat embolization. Most non-fatal fat embolization cases require a stay in the intensive care unit on a ventilator breathing machine and may result in permanent lung impairment.

The queried surgeons accounted for a career total of 198,857 cases. In this group there were 32 fatal and 103 non-fatal fat embolization cases. Over the previous 12 months (July 2015 to July 2016) this group had performed 17,519 cases resulting in 5 fatal and 12 nonfatal pulmonary fat embolization cases. That is almost 1 death every 2 months and 1 case requiring hospitalization in the intensive care unit per month. Surgeon experience i.e. number of cases performed was not statistically related to the number of pulmonary fat embolization cases. About half of the surgeons reported having performed 50 or fewer cases. The technique used/described by the surgeon though was statistically associated with increased risk of having either complication.

Transverse View of the Right Side of the Body at Hip Level



Factors Statistically Increasing the Risk of Pulmonary Fat Embolization-PFE

FactorIncreased Risk of Fatal PFEIncreased Risk of non-Fatal PFE
Deep Muscle Fat Injection4x6x
Mid-Superficial Muscle Fat Injection0.2x0.2x
Cannula Perpendicular to Skin3.9x3.7x
Cannula Parallel to Skin0.6x0.4x
Multiple Holes in Cannula2.5x2.4x

Autopsies on only 2 patients out of 22 Brazilian Butt Lift deaths in Mexico and Columbia showed disruption of the blood vessels deep to the gluteus maximus muscle, which could explain how fat traveled via those veins from the buttocks to the lungs.

Clearly deep buttock fat injections are problematic with 4 to 6 fold increases in fat emboli complications but fatal PFE have been reported with superficial injection as well. A 2016 review of the medical literature yielded 17 case studies and 2 retrospective reviews totaling over 4,000 patients where 46.7% of the articles recommended fat injection into the fat and muscle layers of the buttock, 26.7% recommended injection only into the muscle and 26.7% recommended injection only superficial to the muscle. This leaves us with more questions than answers. Do the surgeons really know the level or depth of their fat injections? Do the size of fat particles injected, total amount of fat injected, patient position on the operating table, syringe vs. ratchet gun injection and/or the entry site of the injection cannula make a difference? Does a small percentage of the population have an anatomical anomaly that predisposes them to this? Does injecting while the cannula is moving outward rather than inward make a difference?


body lift and brazilian butt lift
This is a patient of mine in whom I performed fat grafting to the buttocks at the same time as a body lift. You can estimate the amount of skin removed by the size of the dog's head.

brazilian butt lift and rib removal
46 year old, 5'8", 167 pound patient 31 days after liposuction, tummytuck revision, rib removal, and fat transfer to the buttocks augmentation i.e. Brazilian butt lift, Latin butt.

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Free Fat Grafting

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Venous Leg Ulcers

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Venous Insufficiency or back up pressure in the leg veins is a vexing problem. Patients are disturbed because of occasional discomfort as well as the cosmetic appearance of the condition, which starts as skin discoloration and almost inevitably progresses to open wounds.
So what can be done for a patient who has failed elevation, compression, pentoxifylline, and aspirin?

The Research
An article published in the British Journal of Dermatology suggested that simvastatin may be a useful tool against venous ulcers. These are superficial irregular shaped wounds usually around the ankles caused by backed up pressure in the leg veins. The double-blind, placebo-controlled trial included 66 patients with venous insufficiency ulcers treated for up to 10 weeks with simvastatin 40 mg/d or placebo. All patients were also advised to make use of compression and elevation, as well as other standard ulcer therapy during the study.

The Results
Overall, 90% of patients in the simvastatin group experienced wound healing, compared with only 34% of those in the placebo group, and time to healing was faster in the simvastatin group than in the placebo group.

Venous Ulcers and Simvastatin: Outcomes

Further, in patients with ulcers measuring 5 cm or less, 100% in the simvastatin group experienced wound healing, while only 50% in the placebo group did, and 67% of those with ulcers measuring greater than 5 cm in the simvastatin group experienced wound healing compared with 0% in the placebo group.

What’s the “Take-Home”?
The next step for many of these patients would have been surgical treatments, so I think we can celebrate the fact that we have an agent here that we are very familiar with and that is inexpensive that may make a major difference in healing. Whether statins other than simvastatin might work equally well is unknown, but since the dose and expense of simvastatin are accessible to essentially all of our patients, until further data confirm efficacy of other agents, it’s probably best to stick with simvastatin. This is a game changer.

Reference: Evangelista MTP, Casintahan MFA, Villafuerte LL. Simvastatin as a novel therapeutic agent for venous ulcers: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Br J Dermatol. 2014;170(5):1151-1157.

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Global Plastic Surgery 2016

Vitamin B3 - Niacin Prevents Skin Cancer

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Nearly 5 million people are treated for skin cancer in the U.S. each year, and 1 out of 5 Americans (20% of the population) will develop a skin cancer in their lifetime. The risk of developing a skin cancer increases with immunosupression after transplants, prolonged sun exposure and prior radiation treatment of the skin. The two most common forms are basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma. Each year melanoma, the most dangerous type, occurs in about 73,000 people in the U.S. and kills more than 9,900.
Back in 2015 Australian researchers found that of 386 patients with non-melanoma skin cancers randomized to taking 500mg Vitamin B3 (Niacin) vs. a placebo twice daily that those taking the vitamin cut their chances of developing a new skin cancer by 23% at 12 months and their chances of developing precancerous actinic keratoses by 20% at 9 months. 6 months after stopping the vitamin both groups were at equivalent risk. At that time it wasn't clear if everyone would benefit from taking Vitamin B3 or just those with a previous history of skin cancer. Since Niacin is associated with flushing, headaches and low blood pressure so the Nicotinamide form is recommend to avoid these side effects.

Niacin cannot be directly converted to nicotinamide, but both compounds are precursors of the coenzymes nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP). The coenzymes are required for the metabolic breakdown of fat, carbohydrate, protein and alcohol, the metabolic construction fatty acids and cholesterol and the repair of DNA. The recommended daily allowance for adults is 14 to 20mg per day. The highest concentrations are found in skipjack tuna, sesame seeds, whole grain flour, turkey, pork and venison but most grocery bought foods are fortified with niacin. Severe niacin deficiency causes pellagra, which is characterized by diarrhea, dermatitis, and dementia, as well as Casal's necklace lesions on the lower neck, hyperpigmentation, thickening of the skin, inflammation of the mouth and tongue, digestive disturbances, amnesia, delirium, and eventually death, if left untreated. On the other hand overdoses of niacin can cause liver failure, reversible eye damage and abnormal hear rhythm. Niacin can be manufactured by the liver from the essential amino acid tryptophan.

The sun's ultraviolet rays damage skin cell DNA and suppress the skin's local immune system from removing abnormal cells thereby contributing to the onset of skin cancer. Vitamin B3 counteracts both of these ultraviolet ray reactions. In animal models and in vitro, niacin produces marked anti-inflammatory effects in a variety of tissues – including the brain, gastrointestinal tract, skin, and vascular tissue. Since 2015 in vitro studies conducted with melanocytes (skin pigment cells) and melanoma cells have shown that nicotinamide has the same effect on these cells. Randomized placebo-controlled trials are now planned to determine the efficacy and safety of nicotinamide for melanoma prevention in high-risk patients.

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Skin Cancer

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Microneedling with Dermaroller or DermaPen

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Photodamage and the aging process damage the layers of the skin. Wrinkles appear due to loss of structural matrix components outside skin cells (collagen and elastin), dehydration from loss of hyaluronic acid (HA) in the tissue and overall thinning of superficial epidermal and deep dermal skin layers. Microneedling with a dermaroller involves rolling a cylindrical drum with fine needles over the skin surface.
DERMAROLLER

These rollers are available from online vendors, drug store chains and department stores for home use. The needle size ranges from 0.25mm up to 2mm in diameter and various lengths. Some rollers come with interchangeable heads containing different needle sizes. The needles are embedded in a rotating cylinder that can hold up to 200 needles. By rolling the device over the skin the needles create minuscule holes that close within minutes after the treatment without any visible traces in the epidermis or stratum corneum layers of the skin. A hand held pen with oscillating needles is also available for physician use called DermaPen. Each puncture creates a micro-channel in each punctured layer with a surrounding micro-area of inflammation (accumulation of immune cells such as neutrophils and macrophages) in response to the injury. A healing cell proliferating process follows with formation of new small blood vessels/capillaries, replenishment of structural matrix components (collagen, proelastin, hyaluronic acid, glycosaminoglycans like glucoseamine) by recruited fibroblast cells and surface skin cells growing of the small holes. 6 to 8 weeks after a single treatment 1.1 to 10 fold increases in skin elastin have been found as well as new collagen formation and increased dermal thickness.
The right photo depicts needle depth and changes seen under the microscope 6 weeks after the procedure. The purple stain shows increased collagen in the dermal skin layer and the red areas at the level of the needle tip show newly formed small blood vessels. A remodeling phase follows the completion of healing where contraction of the wound leads to skin tightening and increased tissue integrity. The result is improved tissue hydration, thickness and tightness of the treated areas with evening out of the pigmentation i.e. rejuvenation. The treatment is recommended for scars, acne scars, stretch marks, wrinkles, and for facial rejuvenation. It can also be used to improve the delivery of medications through the skin such as Rogaine applied topically for scalp hair loss. The device can be rolled over the forehead, nose, cheeks, scalp etc.


A study using 0.25mm wide 1.5mm long needles in 3 treatments each 3 months apart for acne scarring showed improvement in skin pigmentation, smoothness and texture. The advantage of the modality over CO2 lasers is the absence of heat making it more applicable for darker skinned individuals. Different needles lengths/depths can reach targeted anatomic layers of the skin depending on which area of the body is being treated. Depending on the body location, the epidermis skin layer can range anywhere from 0.05 mm to 1.5 mm. The dermis layer can range from 0.5 mm to 3 mm. Different areas of the face can have different skin thickness, which can also vary depending on age, race, gender and lifestyle (smoker, sunbather etc).

Microneedling should not be used on patients with scleroderma, collagen vascular disease or active bacterial or fungal infection or a history of keloid scars. Treatment regimens and needle size depend on areas to be treated, individual skin characteristics and condition being treated. A 4-week interval between treatments with a cycle of 3 treatments may be used to treat fine wrinkles. Acne scarring, may require upwards of 6 treatments. Maintenance treatments may be required at 6 months to 1 year intervals.

On September 14, 2017 The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a draft guidance that it considers "microneedling" products to be medical devices and subject to regulation. They cited justification for this being that the devices are associated with a number of risks, including infection, nerve and blood vessel damage, disease transmission, scarring and allergic reactions.

Whether such products are devices largely falls on their intended use, the manufacturer's claims and the size, sharpness and arrangement of the needles i.e. depth of penetration. Specific claims that would meet the definition of a medical device include:

  • Treats scars (e.g., acne scars, atrophic scars, hypertrophic scars, burn scars)
  • Treats wrinkles and deep facial lines
  • Treats cellulite and stretch marks
  • Treats dermatoses
  • Treats acne
  • Treats alopecia (hair loss)
  • Stimulates collagen production
  • Stimulates angiogenesis (blood vessel growth)
  • Promotes wound healing
Which covers about everything you would use the devices for. 

Manufacturers looking to market microneedling products that meet FDA's definition of a device will need to look to FDA's de novo pathway, as FDA considers microneedling devices to be a new type of device not previously cleared or suitable for a 510(k). 

In order to receive clearance, the FDA says manufacturers will need to detail the technical specifications of their device, including its needle characteristics and biocompatibility information and will need usability testing data, sterilization information and cleaning/disinfection details if the device is reusable. 
And depending on the manufacturer's claims, the FDA says clinical studies may be necessary to demonstrate safety and effectiveness. The larger more efficacious needle rollers may not be as readily available as they currently are for much longer and will likely be restricted to doctors offices with once use disposable heads.
FDA draft guidance on microneedling


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Thyroid Disease (Hypo and hyper Thyroidism) and Plastic Surgery

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The function of the thyroid gland in the neck is to take iodine, found in many foods, and convert it into thyroid hormones: thyroxine (T4 with 4 iodine atoms) and triiodothyronine (T3 with 3 iodine atoms) by combining it with the amino acid tyrosine. The normal thyroid gland produces about 80% T4 and about 20% T3 and T4 is mostly converted to T3 in the liver and kidneys. T3 is over 3 times more potent than T4. Thyroid cells are the only cells in the body which can absorb iodine. Iodine deficiency historically common inland and associated with the lack of food originating in the sea causes the thyroid gland to swell forming goiters. Worldwide, over 90% of goiter cases are caused by iodine deficiency.

The enlargement can be on just one side, multinodular and can compress the trachea (windpipe). My mother had a goiter after spending her teens in Siberia. It was so large that she felt it choking her so when she emigrated to Canada she had her thyroid gland partially removed. In the early 1900s goiter was common in the Midwestern US. Since 1924 sodium or potassium iodide has been added to table and cooking salt in the US nationally. This has made goiter rare in the US. Over the following decade there was a gradual increase in average intelligence of 1 standard deviation, 15 points, in iodine-deficient areas and 3.5 points nationally directly attributed to iodized salt. Other countries reached this point much later, the Phillipines in 1995 and Romania in 2002. Much of the Chinese population lives inland, far from sources of dietary iodine. The Chinese government had held a legal monopoly on salt production since 119 BCE and began iodizing salt in the 1960s, but market reforms in the 1980s led to widespread smuggling of non-iodized salt from private producers. In the inland province of Ningxia, only 20% of salt consumed was sold by the China National Salt Industry Corporation. The Chinese government responded by cracking down on smuggled salt, establishing a salt police with 25,000 officers to enforce the salt monopoly. In 1996, the Ministry of Public Health estimated that iodine deficiency was responsible for 10 million cases of mental retardation in China. The medical term for such children born to hypothyroid mothers is cretin. Consumption of iodized salt reached 90% of the Chinese population by 2000.

The T3 and T4 are released from the thyroid gland into the blood stream and are transported throughout the body where they control metabolism (conversion of oxygen and calories to energy), body temperature, tissue healing and heart rate. Every cell in the body depends upon thyroid hormones for regulation of their metabolism. T3 and T4 are also needed for normal development of organs such as the heart and the brain in children and for normal reproductive functioning. Hence the relation between goiter and mental retardation in offspring. The output of T3 and T4 is controlled by feedback loops between the bloodstream and the brain and the peripheral (liver kidney) conversion of in order to keep the system finely tuned.
Thyroid Hormone Pathways

When T3 and T4 blood levels are low the pituitary gland secretes TSH to stimulate the thyroid to produce more T3 and T4. When the T3 and T4 blood levels are high the pituitary produces less TSH. In the present of iodine deficiency the pituitary is starved for T3 and T4 so it produces more TSH that stimulates the thyroid gland so much that it increases in size to become a goiter. Thyroid function is further controlled peripherally in other organs via T4 conversion to  T3 or an inactive form of T3.

When the thyroid gland is functioning normally you are euthyroid. When it is over active you are hyperthyroid and when it is functioning below normal you are hypothyroid, either of which is dangerous for a plastic surgery patient. The causes of abnormal function can be side effect of medications (such as lithium), genetic, autoimmune (Hashimoto's disease where the body's immune cells or antibodies attack the thyroid gland stimulating or stopping the production of T3 and T4), pregnancy, stress, nutritional deficiency, thyroid or pituitary tumors, thyroid surgery or environmental toxins (such as radiation exposure). If you're a woman over 35 your odds of a thyroid disorder can be more than 30%. Women are as much as 10 times as likely as men to have a thyroid problem but the incidence in men is rising . It can be difficult for men to talk about changes in their bodies that are impacting things like sexuality and brain function so their diagnosis is more likely to be delayed. In either case the diagnosis is frequently missed and complaints are attributed to other diseases like ageing or straight forward depression for which antidepressants instead of thyroid hormone are prescribed. At least 30 million Americans have a thyroid disorder and half--—15 million--—are silent sufferers who are undiagnosed, according to The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists.  The symptoms you feel that may indicate you have hypo or hyperthyroidism are:

HYPOTHYROID SYMPTOMS
Feeling tired and having no energy in the morning or all day even after a full night's sleep requiring day time naps.
Feeling cold even when it is not cold-cold intolerance, cold limbs
Feeling depressed or sad
Forgetfulness, poor memory or brain fog, slow thought processes, inability to think clearly or make decisions
Loss of appetite
Low libido/sex drive
Weight gain despite dieting
Loss of muscle mass and strength
Slow reflexes
Body aches and pains
Dry itchy skin (myxedema)
Brittle toe and finger nails with ridges
Constipation
Longer menstrual periods with a heavier flow and more cramps
High blood pressure (patients with hypothyroidism are 2 to 3 times greater  risk of developing high blood pressure)
Mysterious or sudden tingling or numbness--or actual pain--in your arms, legs, feet, or hands
High levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) bad cholesterol that haven't responded to diet, exercise, or medication
Heart problems such as enlarged heart or heart failure
Altered sense of taste and smell
Dry brittle hair
Hair loss/balding including the outer eyebrows-hair stylists are commonly the first to notice hypothyroidism
Fertility problems
Lower testosterone levels in men
Lower sperm count and motility
Anemia related to low iron absorption

Almost every symptom attributed to menopause can be caused by hypothyroidism. Many men taking testosterone or testosterone like supplements are in fact hypothyroid.

HYPERTHYROIDISM SYMPTOMS
Anxiety and "feeling wired"
Increased appetite and feeling hungry all of the time without weight gain
Heart flutters or palpitations feeling like you skipped a heart beat, beating too hard or too quickly
Diarrhea
Shorter, lighter menstrual periods that are further apart
Feeling warm even when it is cold and heat intolerance
Difficulty sleeping due to anxiety with or without rapid heart beat
Overactive reflexes and nervous tremors
Fertility problems
Graves disease- protruding eyeballs and retracted eyelids exposing the eyeballs due to increase fat in the eye socket and scarring with shortening of the eyelid muscles.
Pretibial Myxedema-Swelling of the lower legs with deposition of mucin and glycosaminoglycans that appear as nodules under the skin and can create leg ulcers or entrap nerves in the leg

Actor Marty Feldman with Classic Graves Disease

DIAGNOSIS (this is complicated so you can skip down to TREATMENT or IN PLASTIC SURGERY)
The diagnosis is straight forward if you have had your thyroid removed because of cancer or are already being prescribed thyroxine. In most other causes it can be hard to diagnosis. Getting properly diagnosed and treated is the key to avoiding long-term complications and reversing the current issues but it has its challenges. Do you measure antibody, T4, T3 or TSH levels in the blood? Thyroid hormones dissolve in fat while blood is mostly water. In order for the fat-soluble thyroid hormones to travel through the blood, they need to be bound to protein that act as little taxis to carry the thyroid hormones through the blood vessels to cells all over the body. When they reach the cells, the protein needs to be cleaved off because only the unbound “free” hormones can actually enter the cells and perform their necessary functions. In fact 90% of T4 and T3 in the blood is bound to protein and not available for use. Most doctors just check free T4 and TSH levels in which case low freeT4 and high TSH indicate hypothyroidism and high freeT4 with low TSH indicate hyperthyroidism. But what if your body has trouble converting T4 to T3, both free T4 and TSH are low, free T4 level is normal but TSH level is low etc.? Experience has shown that patients complaining of fatigue with normal freeT4 levels and mildly elevated TSH do not respond to thyroxine. This condition is called subclinical hypothyroidism. Subclinical hyperthyroidism is a below-normal or undetectable blood concentration of TSH with normal levels of free T3 and free T4. Subjects who have subclinical hyperthyroidism have a 65 percent higher risk of dying during the following 6 years than subjects with normal thyroid function.Therefore some people believe that for an accurate diagnosis TSH, Free T4, Free T3, inactive T3 and antibody (Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies and Thyroglobulin Antibodies to check for Hashimoto's disease) levels at a minimum must be obtained in order to make a diagnosis. You can order your own thyroid tests at www.truehealthlabs.com Complete Thyroid Panel


TREATMENT
Up until the 1950s hypothyroidism patients were treated with dried thyroid taken from pigs called Armour Thyroid. 

The glands are dried (desiccated), ground to powder, combined with binder chemicals and pressed into pills that include the entire dried gland and its contents, including all four forms of thyroid hormone (T4, T3, T2, T1), RNA, DNA and co-factors. The pig thyroid closely resembles the human thyroid therefore it provides the multiple components missing in hypothyroid patients. These pills however were inconsistent in terms of the amount of each component in each pill, some people were allergic to pork or could not take the medication for religious reasons. Then in the early 1960s, pharmaceutical companies entered the picture and began to mass produce isolated T4, which is the predominant form of thyroid hormone produced by the thyroid gland. The generic name for T4 is Levothyroxine. Pharmaceutical companies patented brand names like Synthroid.  However these T4 only medications do not work as well in patients who cannot convert T4 to T3 in which case the patient does not get better despite taking the medication. Now we also have synthetic T4 and synthetic T3 medications (such as Cytomel or compounded time-released T3) that some patients favor. Synthroid is adequate for most people but some may only improve with Armour.

Many hypothyroidism sufferers are not feeling well despite treatment because their lab results are in the “normal” range but not at the optimal level for them. Because of the dangers of hyper and hypo thyroidism these people need gradual changes in doseage under doctor supervision until they feel optimal. It’s about what works best for the patient and providing them with different possible options to try to see what works best.

The treatment of hyperthyroidism is propyl thiouracil, methimazole (to inhibit T4 and T3 production), Potassium or sodium iodide (to Prevent T4 and T3 release), Propranolol (to relieve some of the symptoms) and Radioactive iodine (to kill the thyroid gland producing T4 and T3). The treatment for Graves disease changes in the eye is surgical expansion of the eye socket and release of the eyelid muscles. The treatment for pretibial myxedema is injection of steroids. Graves disease and pretibial myxedema do not go away by just bringing down T3 and T4 to normal levels.

A. myxedema before and C. after injection with steroids.

IN PLASTIC SURGERY

Surgery on anyone with hypo or hyperthyroidism can be deadly. Hypothyroid patients are sensitive to anaesthetic agents in terms of dropping their blood pressure and slowed or stopped heart rate and take longer to recover from anesthetics. They have a poor tolerance to blood loss and other stresses. The stress of infection, surgery or trauma can put a hypothyroid patient into myxedema coma with
-  impaired mentation/coma
-  decreased breathing drive
-  decreased body temperature
-  low blood pressure
-  slow heart rate
-  slowed reflexes
-  low blood sodium levels.
The treatment is blood warming, synthroid, steroids, placement on a breathing machine (ventilator), and correction of blood chemistry in an intensive care unit.

Some plastic surgeons have reported Hypothyroid patients requiring transfusion of up to 4 - 6 units of blood as late as 10 to 15 days after liposuction surgery as red blood cell counts continued to drop over this time despite oral iron supplementation. Anemic iron deficient hypothyroid patients require intravenous iron because they have difficulty absorbing iron through the intestines.

A review of 198 patients undergoing facelift surgery between Jan. 1, 2014, and May 31, 2015 found 4 patients with hypothyroidism whose swelling lasted 13 weeks while normally most (75 to 80% ) of swelling normally resolves within 4 weeks.

Hyperthyroid patients can go into thyroid crisis or storm within 6 to 24 hours after surgery due to a surge in T3 and T4 output in response to the surgery. This cases fever, high hear rates, abnormal hear rhythm (atrial fibrillation), low blood pressure, vomiting, dehydration, high respiratory rate, acute severe abdominal pain, agitation, psychosis, seizures and ultimate demise. The reported mortality rate for thyroid storm is 10 to 30%. These patients also require intensive care unit treatment.

The key to successful management of these emergencies is timely diagnosis and management by experienced physician in an intensive care setting.

Any patient on thyroid or anti-thyroid medications should have their thyroid function lab tests drawn  along with complete blood count and basic metabolic blood tests and obtain medical clearance shortly before under going any plastic surgery beyond very minor procedures. If abnormalities are found these tests have to be normalized by appropriate medications and medical care before any elective cosmetic surgery is under taken. The consequences of not doing so can be quite severe.


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Cosmetic Surgery After Splenectomy

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The spleen  is located in the left upper abdomen under the rib cage.

The spleen's key function is the removal of old red blood cells (RBCs), defective circulating blood cells, and circulating bacteria. In addition, the spleen helps maintain normal red blood cell appearance by processing immature red blood cells, removing their nuclei, and changing the shape of the cellular membrane. Other functions of the spleen include the removal of nuclear remnants of red blood cells, denatured hemoglobin, and iron granules and the manufacture of opsonins (properdin and tuftsin). It is recognized as the host for immune cells essential for antibody production and filters out blood impurities, particularly encapsulated bacteria. It also functions as a secondary source of red blood cells if the bone marrow fails to produce sufficient red blood cells. The spleen can become enlarged  in a variety of conditions such as malaria, mononucleosis and most commonly in cancers of the lymphatics, such as lymphomas or leukemia. A very large spleen is prone to rupture resulting in severe blood loss.

A splenectomy is a surgical procedure that partially or completely removes the spleen. The indications for spleen removal include:

  1. Traumatic rupture
  2. Hodgkin disease - In patients who are refractory to medical therapy, splenectomy is indicated to decrease pain, fullness, and an overactive spleen
  3. Felty syndrome (rheumatoid arthritis, enlarged spleen, and white blood cell deficiency) -  
  4. Splenic abscess, cyst, sarcoidosis
  5. Blood abnormality that causes the spleen to remove too many blood components from circulation such as in cases of genetic misshapen red blood cells

Also the spleen can die in sickle cell if the number of sickled cells filtered is so high that the spleen becomes clogged impeding blood flow through it. Patients without a functioning spleen are predisposed to overwhelming fulminant infections caused by encapsulated bacteria (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis [a cause of meningitis], and Capnocytophaga canimorsus[from contact with dogs]) that do not respond to the usual antibiotic treatments, 40% to 54% of these patients will die. They are also susceptible to Babeosis from tick bites. Therefore prevention of infection by vaccination is a key feature of the management of these patients and vaccination protocols are commonly followed before and/or after surgical removal of the spleen.

The usual/recommended vaccines are:
  • Haemophilus influenzae b conjugate
  • Diphtheria toxoid, tetanus toxoid, acellular pertussis; tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid; tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and reduced acellular pertussis
  • Influenza-inactivated (inactivated influenza vaccine)
  • Measles, mumps, and rubella-live 
  • Measles, mumps, and rubella-varicella-live 
  • Meningococcal conjugate (Menactra or Menveo for patients 56 years old and older and given every 5 years)
  • Meningococcal serogroup B
  • Pneumococcal conjugate (PCV13)
  • Pneumococcal polysaccharide (PPSV23)
  • Polio-inactivated (inactivated poliovirus vaccine) e
  • Rotavirus-live 
  • Varicella-live 
  • Zoster-live
Live attenuated influenza vaccine should not be given to patients who do not have a functioning spleen.

If your spleen has been removed or is non-functional you should not undergo any elective surgery unless all of your immunization vaccines are up to date. Strep pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Haemophilus influenzae vaccines are usually given 2 weeks before elective surgery and you should be up to date with your yearly influeza vaccine (flu shot). ​

​​Since blood flow in the portal system is altered by splenectomy there is also risk of clot in the portal vein to the liver during the low blood flow states associated with anesthesia, surgery and recovery from surgery. Therefore a blood thinner should be considered around the time of surgery. ​ ​

For procedures involving the paranasal sinuses or respiratory tract such as rhinoplasty amoxicillin 2gm orally 30 to 60 minutes prior to the procedure or the equivalent intravenously is given because  encapsulated bacteria responsible for postsplenectomy sepsis live on the mucosal surfaces of the respiratory tract. For patients who are penicillin allergic an extended-spectrum fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, or gemifloxacin) can be substituted. After the initial course of antibiotics these patients have to have extra pills on hand in their home, at work, and ideally on their person for immediate initiation at the onset of fever or chills.

The next important factor is why you had the splenectomy. If it was performed because of trauma that is all you should require. If it was removed because of lupus, sickle cell, ITP or other blood disorder vaccination alone will not be enough. Further precautions required before elective surgery would depend on what the exact reason for splenectomy was. ​​ ​This is clearly something you should not do without careful planning, appropriate specialist input and making sure every t is crossed and every i is dotted.


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#FatGrafting vs. #ChinImplant

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According to American Society of Plastic Surgeons procedural statistics
between 2000 and 2016 there was a 6% decrease in all cosmetic surgery performed but a 38% decrease in the number of chin operations performed. Between 2013 and 2016 there was a 14% increase in all cosmetic surgery but a 13% decrease in the number of chin augmentation operations. 78% of that decrease were women. Clearly chin surgery is becoming less popular especially for women.

Chin enlargement can be achieved by bone surgery (genioplasty), chin implant placement or injection of temporary or permanent fillers. Chin implant placement is currently the most popular method of chin enlargement. The implants can be made of silicone, goretex or medpor. Each method and type of implant is associated with its own pros and cons. The decrease in number of augmentation surgeries being performed is therefore likely due to dissatisfaction with chin implants. I covered the pros and cons of different implant materials in a previously blog Facial Implants - cheeks, chin, jaw.  The assessment of results for any of these methods focuses on the front to back chin projection, resolution of dimpled chin skin (mentalis muscle strain) and symmetry visible on a frontal view. For middle aged and older patients the presence and severity of marionette lines and lower lip-chin grooves also impact the results and are less likely to be improved by implants alone. This blog will focus on the methods themselves and their pros and cons.


MethodProsCons
bone surgery (genioplasty)can lengthen vertically and front to backmore swelling longer recovery time, blood supply to bone can be compromised, step off at outer corners of the bone cut, teeth can be damaged
chin implantpermanent, squared male chin achievablevisibility, possible implant displacement, possible infection
injectable fillerlocal anesthesia only, quick recoverymost only give temporary result, can only increase front to back projection
injected fat graftcan be performed under local anesthesia, ideal for lower lip-chin groove filling, permanentunpredictable fat survival that can cause uneven contour or asymmetry, cannot form a square male chin, can only increase front to back projection, may need more than 1 session to achieve the desired result, can change with weight gain or loss

Although fat grafts and injectable fillers can soften marionette lines the ideal way to remove those lines is a facelift.
Squared Male           Round Female Chin

Square Male Medpor Chin Implant

Round Female Silicone Chin Implant

A published prospective study of 42 consecutive patients (32 female and 10 male aged 19 to 50 years mean age 28 years) who underwent chin augmentation by means of fat grafting between October of 2014 and January of 2016 showed that injection of 4 to 10cc (average 7.5cc) of fat reliably augmented the chin. All patients had not previously had chin surgery and wanted/needed only front to back chin augmentation without vertical lengthening. At 6 month follow up after surgery these patients retained 82% of the injected fat with resulting increased front to back chin projections of 3 to 11mm (average 7mm). The degree of fat survival was not related to the amount of fat injection in these small amounts. Only 3 of these patients requested another procedure for additional chin projection despite all 3 having gained more than 6mm in projection from the first procedure.

Weakness of the chin has been associated with up to 30 percent of rhinoplasty patients. Nevertheless, many rhinoplasty patients are not ready to commit to an implant to improve the chin area. These patients are much more likely to accept fat grafting to improve the chin contour. The recent increasing use of injected fat graft chin augmentation may make chin augmentation more popular with female patients.
Chin Implant Patient

Before (top) and 5 months after (bottom) surgery photos of secondary facelift and injection fat grafting to the chin. The marionette and laugh lines were reduced by a combination of facelift and fat grafting. 5cc of fat was placed in the lower lip chin groove and 8cc was placed directly into the chin. To rejuvenate the area and reduce chin dimpling (mentalis muscle strain).

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Seborrheic Keratosis/Keratoses - Warts

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Seborrheic keratoses are common superficial skin tumors made up of immature superficial skin cells and sometimes referred to as warts. They usually develop after the age of 50, but they can also appear in young adulthood. There is a genetic predisposition to develop a high number of seborrheic keratoses, although the precise inheritance pattern is unknown. Their cause is unknown but UV radiation/sun exposure or human papillomavirus (HPV) infection are suspected. They have well defined borders and are well-demarcated, round or oval skin lesions with a dull, uneven cauliflower like surface and a typical stuck-on appearance. Over time they can grow and become darker in color. Virtually everyone will have these if they live long enough.

They generally do not cause any symptoms, but chronic irritation due to friction trauma may occasionally cause itching, pain, or bleeding. The diagnosis of seborrheic keratosis is usually based on their appearance of being "stuck on," warty, distinctly margined, often scaly dark superficial skin lesions located most commonly on the trunk, face, and upper extremities but they can occur anywhere that you have skin including the scalp. Since they are benign and slow growing health insurance does not cover their removal unless there is a suspicion of skin cancer or the keratosis becomes infected etc. While most are clearly visible as keratoses some keratoses are hard to differentiate from a cancer in which case a biopsy is required to know for sure.

The most common treatment is freezing (cryotherapy) followed by shaving, excision, electrodessication (burning with an electric current) or burning it off with a laser. Other than shaving or excision the other methods of treatment destroy the tissue so a definitive diagnosis under the microscope is not possible. Also each of these methods of removal leave a scar. Cryotherapy also removes skin pigment leaving you with a visible white spot so its use is limited in darker skinned individuals.

A new treatment has recently been FDA approved and is now available in the US.
Eskata is a 40% hydrogen peroxide solution dispensed in a pen brush applicator. 2 applications (4 times each 1 minute apart per visit) 2 to 3 weeks apart completely removes most seborrheic keratoses  and the results I have seen are remarkable. It is like a pencil eraser for keratoses. The most common side effects of ESKATA include itching, stinging, crusting, swelling, redness and scaling. It is only available in doctors' offices for application by doctors wearing gloves because it cannot be applied to mucous membranes, causes significant scarring if applied to normal skin and is extremely dangerous if it gets in/on your eyes.

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Armpit Rolls and Tail of the Breast

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Armpit Rolls
Armpit rolls are folds of skin and fat that lie at the upper front edge of the armpit. They make some women self conscious about wearing spaghetti strap tops or strapless dresses and bras. Their presence can be independent of breast size or patient weight
armpit rolls are independent of breast size
Armpit Rolls Are Independent of Breast Size as Seen Before and After Breast Reduction Surgery

and they can be asymmetric in size or even absent on one side.
armpit rolls can be asymmetric
Armpit Rolls Can be Present on Only One Side
In older individuals they can deflate leaving just a fold of excess skin.
deflated armpit roll
Deflated Left Armpit Fold in Older Patient

They are composed of a variable combination of skin, fat and glandular breast tissue. Their removal by liposuction is a common part of breast reduction surgery where they are mostly composed of fat rather than glandular breast tissue. When looking at before and after breast reduction photos they may be more visible on side views. Ignoring them in breast reduction surgery yields a less than optimal result. In massive weight loss patients the skin component is much larger and in most cases some removal of the excess skin is required. The surgical modalities employed therefore depend on contents of the roll. As mentioned most patients do well with just liposuction or even non-surgical fat removal by injection, freezing etc.. If the roll is mostly glandular direct excision via an armpit incision is the best option. In cases where the pinch thickness of the roll is minimal or there is still a visible roll after liposuction or direct excision the skin is removed as it would be in an arm lift described in my previous blog Upper Arm Lift - Brachioplasty. The upper arm lift is composed of an inner upper arm segment and when necessary armpit and side of chest extensions. In the case of armpit rolls only the armpit extension would be required i.e. armpit portion of an L-lift brachioplasty with or without z-plasties hiding the scar in the armpit behind the muscle.
armpit section of upper arm lift
Armpit Section of Upper Arm Lift

Depending on the individual case this could be performed under local anesthetic.

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Upper Arm Lift - Brachioplasty

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Coolsculpt Cryolipolysis (Freezing Fat) Can Make You Fatter

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Studies freezing fat in order to remove it without surgery were first done in 2008. Since then Cryolipolysis coolsculpting has become the most popular noninvasive fat reduction procedure in the world. Cryolipolysis involves the noninvasive cooling of fat to selectively kill fat cells without injuring surrounding non-fat tissue. These cells slowly dissolve and gradually release the fat contained within them. It takes 2-4 months for this process to reduce the fat layer and the results of a cryolipolysis treatment become visible. A just published review of patients undergoing the procedure between 2013 and 2016 revealed that as many as 1 out of every 138 cryolipolysis treatments has the opposite effect. Those patients develop paradoxical adipose hyperplasia (PAH) i.e. the fat in the treated area grows larger becoming noticeable up to 3 months following the treatment. There have been no described cases of this resolving on its own.

The combination of suction and cold in #coolsculpting initiates an inflammatory response in some individuals most likely in response to dying fat cells resulting in enlargement and/or proliferation of the adjacent fat cells. It is currently unclear if this is mostly due to machine settings, genetic predisposition or technical aspects of the treatment. While inflamed the pinched fat feels hard and may be tender to pinch. It takes 6 to 9 months after the initial coolsculpting treatment for the inflammation to resolve and the fat to soften on pinch. The treatment for PAH is standard surgical liposuction but if the surgery is performed before the fat softens/inflammation resolves it will only stimulate the fat to grow even more. Unfortunately more than 1 liposuction treatment may be required, liposuction that employs heat (laser assisted liposuction, Vaser...) compound the problem and
paradoxical adipose hyperplasia after coolsculpting
paradoxical adipose hyperplasia after coolsculpting that has stretched the skin

if this occurs on the abdomen it can stretch the skin turning a patient for whom liposuction would have been sufficient before coolsculpting to someone who requires an abdominoplasty/tummy tuck after coolsculpting.

The incidence of PAH after coosculpting is high enough that it should be on the consent forms for the treatments to meet the definition of informed consent for the treatments.

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Liposuction and its variants tumescent liposuction, superficial liposuction, smartlipo, power assisted liposuction, microliposculpture, smartlipo

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Cosmetic Surgery in Patients Taking Steroids

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Steroids refers to a broad group of chemicals produced by the body and drugs or medications with a spectrum of properties. All steroids have a common 4 ring chemical structure with side attachments that change its name and properties giving rise to everything from testosterone to bile, estrogen, estradiol, progesterone, prednisone, decadron etc. Most of these are found in nature produced by animals or plants but some can only be made synthetically in a lab. There are 2 main categories sex hormones and corticosteroids with subcategories that apply to each.

Categories (subcategories)Functional RegulationExamples
Sex hormones-androgens (anabolic steroids) and estrogenssex differences, puberty, reproduction, muscle and bone metabolism, fat metabolism and distributionTestosterone, Androstenedione, Estrogen, Progesterone, Estradiol, Medrogestone, Methylprednisolone
Corticosteroids
     Glucocorticoidssugar metabolism, immune function (reduce inflammation), healing, fetal development in the wombCortisol, Prednisone, Dexamethasone
     Mineralocorticoidsblood volume and pressure, kidney function, water balanceAldosterone, Fludrocortisone

Their relative category potencies and time length of effect vary. Dexamethasone's glucorticoid effect is 80 times stronger than cortisol, it lasts 6 times as long and has no mineralocorticoid effect. Testosterone is 5 times stronger than androstenedione. As the doseage or blood level increases each chemical begins to have effects in other categories so a high doseage of prednisone can start to cause water retention, a mineralocorticoid effect.

This blog post will focus on the glucorticoid portion of the above table. Glucocorticoids are commonly prescribed for allergies, asthma, a variety of skin conditions, ulcerative colitis, lupus, arthritis and many other different diseases as well as after transplant surgery. In the UK in 2008 0.79% of the population was prescribed long-term (i.e. ≥3 months) oral glucocorticoids. That is 484,270 people. In 2016 glucocorticoids were the 19th and 49th most common prescriptions in the US. In 2017 prednisone was the third most common prescription in the US.
brain adrenal axis
Glucocorticoid production by the body is regulated through feedback mechanisms via the brain (hypothalamus and pituitary gland) and the adrenal glands that varies with emotional states, sleep wake cycles, fasting vs. eating and activity levels. The brain stimulates the adrenal glands and high adrenal output reduces brain stimulation. The stress of surgery causes cortisol levels to rise within 45 minutes of skin incision, peak 5 to 10 times normal within 10 hours after surgery and fall back to normal within 24 hours if all goes well. The brain adrenal axis of control is primed to the equivalent of about 7.5mg prednisone per day stress free baseline. At lower levels the brain signals the adrenal glands to produce more. Therefore, medication doseages higher than this turn the axis off and make it less responsive or sensitive to stresses. At the extremes of low body production (Addison's disease) and high body production (Cushing's disease) there are easily visible body changes. In between those extremes the levels can still be such that response to surgery is impaired despite there being no visible physical indication before surgery because the brain adrenal control axis is impaired. This was first noted in the early 1950s in patients who had been taking glucocorticoid medications before surgery and collapsed after surgery with low blood pressure that normalized after the patients were given glucocorticoids. Thus there are 2 factors to consider, the baseline level of these chemicals in the bloodstream and the ability of the brain adrenal axis to respond to stress. The blood levels can be abnormal due to internal body causes such as adrenal failure or externally ingested or injected medications such as prednisone. Furthermore, different individual's bodies respond differently to the same doseage of these medications depending on the length of time of exposure. Once the brain adrenal axis has been exposed to the equivalent of about 7.5mg prednisone per day for as few as 5 to 7 days it takes up to a year without exposure to the medication for the adrenal portion of the axis to regain its sensitivity to brain stimulation. So even if the unstressed blood levels are normal within that time period the adrenal glands can't secrete more when stressed and can result in collapse. In such patients the recommendation is IV injection of 100mg of hydrocortisone (25mg of prednisone or 3 to 4mg dexamethasone) at the beginning of surgery. For minor surgery or imaging procedures with dye that should suffice. For more extensive surgery or complications following surgery the medication is given every 8 hours for 24 or more hours.

For safety in cosmetic surgery these patients have to be placed in 2 groups. The first is that which is not currently taking glucocorticoids but has an impaired brain adrenal axis. The second is that which is currently taking glucocorticoids for a chronic disease. The first group is treated as described above. For the second group the surgeon has to account for the tendency of Glucocorticoids (corticosteroids) to cause separation of healed or sutured incisions, increased risk of infection, and delayed healing of open wounds while continuing the glucocorticoid medication they need after surgery. Glucocorticoids produce these effects by interfering with inflammation, fibroblast proliferation, collagen synthesis and degradation, deposition of connective tissue ground substances, angiogenesis, wound contraction, and re-epithelialization. Vitamin A restores the inflammatory response and promotes epithelialization and the synthesis of collagen and ground substances. However, vitamin A does not reverse the detrimental effects of glucocorticoids on wound contraction and infection. The RDA for vitamin A is 3,000 IU per day. To reverse the effect of glucocorticoids on healing 10,000 IU per day for 2 to 3 weeks after surgery should suffice for those that are not vitamin A deficient and is well within the range of what could be toxic. This would have to be given in addition to the hydrocortisone, prednisone, dexamethasone or glucocorticoid that was being taken prior to surgery.

In summary before surgery your surgeon needs to know which specific glucocorticoid medication was prescribed/taken, what the doseage was, how long it was taken for, if it was taken daily or intermittently and when it was stopped. All of these variables can impact the safety of your cosmetic surgery.

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Ear Lobe Reduction Surgery

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earlobe reduction surgery
Earlobes are composed of an upper attached part and a lower unattached or free part. They can be different lengths on either side of the head.The free part elongates with age so it can be 1.5 to 2 times longer in someone in their 70s vs. someone in their 40s. The optimal lengths are 5 to 10mm for the upper fixed segment and 5mm for the lower free segment.

The best surgical procedures to reduce earlobe size are those that do not result in a scar that directly connects to the outer edge of the ear in order to prevent notching. The triangular excision pattern on the bottom right most closely approaches the ideal excision pattern. Most earlobe reductions are performed in conjunction with facelift surgery but they can easily be performed alone under local anesthesia.


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