If your liposuction was straightforward tumescent liposuction and you did not have an energy-based device such as vaser or ultrasonic liposuction, these irregularities can usually be treated quite well with SAFE lipo. This is a technique originated by simeon Wall which involves fat shifting, or moving fat from one place to another to smooth everything out. This is performed by an experienced surgeon using special instrumentation. Hope this helps. Best regards
Are you very in my opinion from previous posts. The technique or technology of liposuction is your relevant to your outcome. It was done poorly with Portic make. The outcome is strictly operator dependent. Way too much that was removed and it was done unevenly. This is left you with excessive scar tissue but primarily with insufficient fat layers. It is very difficult and not possible to restore your abdomen to normal. Treating the scar tissue does not work. It simply creates more scar tissue. Restoring the fat with fat transfer does not work well either because you no longer have any host tissue to support the grafted fat. Revision liposuction is based on further liposuction to create a more even contour. Since the primary problem is that too much fat was removed removing even more fat is a risky proposition that will only cause slight improvement at the very best. If you understand what the primary problem is then you will understand that muscle strengthening with Emsculot will only strengthen muscles and not be a fix for previously poorly done liposuction. Unfortunately there's very little that can be done to restore your abdomen to normal. I'm a 56-year-old board-certified plastic surgeon has practice of devoted exclusively to liposuction and fat transfer procedures. I've performed over 7000 liposuction procedures. I'm one of very few board certified plastic surgeons who specialize exclusively on this treatment. I feel like I can speak as an authority on the topic. I am not a believer in giving false hope. I believe patients deserve the truth. I'm optimistic only when optimism is warranted. Best, Mats Hagstrom MD