Austin Breast Implants doctors
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Randy J. Buckspan, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
630 W. 34th Street Ste 201, Austin |
16 answers | |
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Dustin L. Reid, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
901 W. 38th Street Suite 401, Austin |
14 answers | |
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Jennifer Walden, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
300 Beardsley Lane Bldg C, Suite 101, Austin |
14 answers | |
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Elizabeth S. Harris, MD
San Antonio Plastic Surgeon
540 N. Madison Oak Suite 400, San Antonio |
9 answers | |
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Suresh Koneru, MD
San Antonio Plastic Surgeon
423 Treeline Park Ste 300, San Antonio |
8 answers | |
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S.Pasquale Maggi, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
3410 Far West Blvd. Suite 110, 160, Austin |
8 answers | |
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Mario Diana, MD
San Antonio Plastic Surgeon
19234 Stonehue Suite 101, San Antonio |
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7 answers |
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William H. Gorman, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
3003 Bee Caves Rd Ste 203, Austin |
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7 answers |
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Steven Holzman, MD
Austin Plastic Surgeon
6818 Austin Center Boulevard Suite 206, Austin |
4 answers | |
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Thomas T. Jeneby, MD
San Antonio Plastic Surgeon
7272 Wurzbach Unit 801 801, San Antonio |
4 answers |
Recent Answers
I'm 1 month PO. I adore my new breasts! I love the size and shape. They are so close to perfection. All I wish is for them to be a wee bit closer together, without the aid of a push up bra. Are larger/wider implants the only option? I would feel comfortable going slightly larger, but cost is an issue. Please note I do praise the surgeon. He is very highly renowned. I understand he's done a fabulous job & that my anatomy may be making it difficult to achieve very close breasts. Thnk you.
It sounds like you already have the right concepts in mind. I tell my patients that standing cleavage (without a bra) is usually impossible to achieve and that all augmented patients should expect to continue to need a bra to attain a nice cleavage line. Larger implants or a more central dissection of your implant pockets will not improve your look. You will just look more unnatural and possibly suffer from symmastia (the appearance of connected breasts) which is very difficult to correct. You look wonderful and I am glad you are happy with the result.
I have has breast implants for 2 years, I have recently noticed that when I lye down my left breast is sagging and my right is still up right. When I push it back up it feels kind of funny, like I am moving the implant. I'm wondering if maybe it has detached itself?
Moving the implant in the pocket will not hurt anything but it is likely from your description that your breast implant has become laterally displaced overtime. This can be fixed with a surgery that places sutures on the inside to force the implant back toward the center and make it more symmetric with the other side. I would recommend that you see a board certified plastic surgeon in your area and see what they recommend. Thanks, Dr. Kerr
Is this in my head, or have the implants really interrupted my ability to do many push-ups in a row? THe implants are under the muscle.
The short answer is yes they probably have. The implant changes the directional pull of the pectoralis muscle when doing chest exercises. At my Austin, Texas plastic surgery practice I recommend that my patients in general avoid specific pectoral building exercises after breast augmentation since they build up the pectoral muscle and we want to keep this muscle soft and pliable rather than build and enlarged. I recommend avoiding pushups, pec deck, bench press, and other chest targeting exercises. Do your general routine but focus more on arms, legs, abs, etc and less on chest to keep your implants soft and looking good. Hope that helps, Dr. Kerr.







