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Health & Wellness
Enhancing Masculine Features After Massive Weight Loss (WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT)
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<blockquote data-quote="madman" data-source="post: 185854" data-attributes="member: 13851"><p>[ATTACH=full]10599[/ATTACH]</p><p><strong>Fig. 10 <span style="color: rgb(184, 49, 47)">Case 3</span> <span style="color: rgb(44, 130, 201)">is a 29-year-old with serial ellipses marked for revision surgery. </span>He is 5'11", 200 pounds, after 115-pound dietary weight loss. He is disappointed by gynecomastia, low nipples, and loose chest skin a year after two-stage body contouring elsewhere <span style="color: rgb(184, 49, 47)">(a, b)</span>. The prior first stage was an abdominoplasty and lower body lift. The second stage was a transverse excision along the inframammary fold, extended to the lateral chest. His IMF remains defined, with no definition of pectoral borders. He was annoyed by anterior chest skin sagging when leaning forward, residual epigastric adiposity, high abdominoplasty scar, and left lower abdominal painful neuroma <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0)">(X)</span>. The revision lines of resection had to be adjusted to include scars left by the original procedures. UAL of the upper torso is marked. <span style="color: rgb(184, 49, 47)">c, d</span> Two years following the revision, he has smooth, even contours, tight skin of the anterior torso with the torso appearing longer due to the greater distance between the lower abdominal scar and the raised NAC’s. His raised arms stretch the pectoralis muscles, which flattens inferior to the NAC’s. The oblique extension of his abdominoplasty revision further narrowed his waist. The lateral and inferior borders of the pectoralis major are defined, while the IMF’s are obliterated. The tightness of his chest skin is reflected by the absence of skin sag and prominence of his Pectoralis Major when leaning forward. The scars have faded </strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="madman, post: 185854, member: 13851"] [ATTACH type="full"]10599[/ATTACH] [B]Fig. 10 [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]Case 3[/COLOR] [COLOR=rgb(44, 130, 201)]is a 29-year-old with serial ellipses marked for revision surgery. [/COLOR]He is 5'11", 200 pounds, after 115-pound dietary weight loss. He is disappointed by gynecomastia, low nipples, and loose chest skin a year after two-stage body contouring elsewhere [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)](a, b)[/COLOR]. The prior first stage was an abdominoplasty and lower body lift. The second stage was a transverse excision along the inframammary fold, extended to the lateral chest. His IMF remains defined, with no definition of pectoral borders. He was annoyed by anterior chest skin sagging when leaning forward, residual epigastric adiposity, high abdominoplasty scar, and left lower abdominal painful neuroma [COLOR=rgb(0, 0, 0)](X)[/COLOR]. The revision lines of resection had to be adjusted to include scars left by the original procedures. UAL of the upper torso is marked. [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]c, d[/COLOR] Two years following the revision, he has smooth, even contours, tight skin of the anterior torso with the torso appearing longer due to the greater distance between the lower abdominal scar and the raised NAC’s. His raised arms stretch the pectoralis muscles, which flattens inferior to the NAC’s. The oblique extension of his abdominoplasty revision further narrowed his waist. The lateral and inferior borders of the pectoralis major are defined, while the IMF’s are obliterated. The tightness of his chest skin is reflected by the absence of skin sag and prominence of his Pectoralis Major when leaning forward. The scars have faded [/B] [/QUOTE]
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General Health & Fitness
Health & Wellness
Enhancing Masculine Features After Massive Weight Loss (WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT)
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