Posts Tagged ‘male plastic surgery’
Monday, June 6th, 2011
While women have always made up the majority of plastic surgery patients, the percentage of men is steadily increasing. More men today acknowledge what women have known all along…appearance does matter regardless of age.
While the goals are always the same, to look as good as one can, a man’s age influences why it matters. Younger men are motivated by optimal attractiveness or to correct features that they consider embarrassing. Older men are motivated by divorce, job competitiveness and countering the effects of time. The common procedures that men choose, not surprisingly, are also influenced by age. Droopy eyelid skin and neck wattles are the concerns of older men while the removal of excessive body fat and reshaping noses, ears and chins captivate younger men.
While age may make a difference in what plastic surgery procedures men desire, there is one characteristic that they all share. Men are less patient than women, particularly when it comes to appearance issues. This means that cosmetic treatments that require regular maintenance, like Botox and injectable fillers, are not that appealing. Men prefer more of an immediate fix like what surgery does. And men do not want a lot of recovery or downtime after surgery if possible. Discretion is paramount in male cosmetic surgery. While everyone knows that men having plastic surgery is not rare, the male patient does not really want to broadcast it.
One observation that has reverberated amongst plastic surgeons for decades is that men can be difficult to please and are less satisfied than women after surgery. They also are more prone to want revisional surgery. That has not been my experience…with the exception of the younger male patient. Facelifts and eyelid surgery in the middle to older-aged male gets good results and satisfaction is just as good as women. When it comes to structural changes in the face or body contouring surgery in the younger male patient, there is some definite truth to that belief. Younger men today grow up today playing with action figures, looking at men’s magazines and seeing great emphasis placed on exercise and sports which exposes them to more pressure to have a very masculine face and body. This makes managing the expectations from surgery in younger men extremely important.
One male quality that seems to be true…and most women will probably second it as well… is that many men are not very tolerant of pain. They are less comfortable with after surgery discomfort and that is to be expected as men have never endured pregnancy and child delivery. That gives women a decisive advantage in the early after effects of many plastic surgery procedures. This is not to say that men are not tough, just not as tough as women when it comes to appearance alteration.
Last year over one million men underwent some form of cosmetic alteration in the U.S. The stigma of men paying more attention to their appearance and grooming habits has changed alot in the past ten years. The beauty gap between men and women is closing to some degree as an increase in the desire of men to use their improved looks to remain competitive professionally and personally is on the rise.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
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Monday, May 2nd, 2011
One of the most common reasons men appear for facial plastic surgery revolves around one issue…they are tired of looking tired. Even though they get 7 or 8 hours of sleep, every morning someone eventually asks if they had slept well. Most men over age 50 can relate. They want their face to look as good as they feel and can be frustrating when it is not.
The classic story that I often tell is one of the differences between being younger and older. In college you pull an all-nighter and the next day, looking like you had, proudly proclaim your accomplishment when asked. When you are older you get 8 hours of sleep, go into work and the first thing someone asks is…did you pull an all-nighter?
Eyelid lifts, or blepharoplasties, can clean up that tired look by removing extra skin and fat from around the eyes that has developed over the years. But blepharoplasty is just one of the growing number of cosmetic procedures that more men are having. Facelifts, hair transplants and stomach and love handle liposuction make up most of the age-fighting operations.
While men were once just a minute fraction of any plastic surgeon’s practice, those numbers have grown to represent 15% to 20% today. Men of all ages are growing more comfortable with the idea of getting help for their looks. It is simply more acceptable today, another example of the rapidly changing social attitudes sweeping our society. Most men are interested in improving their appearances but without taking too much time from work. It also doesn’t hurt that plastic surgery reality shows (do men really watch these?) and affordable financing have also promoted interest.
Another galvanizing drive for man having plastic surgery is job insecurity and staying competitive. While looking good and appearing energetic has always been important, in a tough job market it is important to look as best as one can. I just had a man come in last week who was between jobs and wanted to look good for interviews. The competitive nature of men can make them willing to try something they believe will give them an edge in an interview or a potential business transaction. The practical economics of men also has them saying such changes are an investment in their future.
The internet has also fueled this male cosmetic surgery interest, specifically internet dating. I have had more than one man who has told me he can’t post a current picture online of the way he looks now. One patient even told me a woman embarrassed him by commenting in an e-mail exchange about his eye bags. (he reposted his picture after his eyelid lifts)
Men fear more than women that undergoing plastic surgery will make them look too drastically changed or have a ‘surgical look’. While there are certainly some male celebrities and actors that have that look, they are the exception. In reality, getting rid of those sagging jowls and droopy eyelids can definitely make one look less tired and more alert but the change is almost always subtle and natural.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
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Sunday, April 3rd, 2011
When it comes to plastic surgery, women are perceived to make up the vast majority of patients. And for the entire last century as plastic surgery evolved, this was historically true. But a gender shift is occurring in whom now chooses to undergo the altering effects of the knife.
In a recent article entitled, ‘Men Fuel Rebound in Plastic Surgery: Sizeable Increases in Facelifts and Other Surgical Procedures for Men’ that appeared in the Science Daily, more men than ever before are having something ‘done’. Statistics released by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) show that cosmetic plastic surgery procedures were up about 2 percent in 2010 compared to 2009. However, male plastic surgery procedures increased significantly. Facelifts for men were up nearly 15 percent in 2010 while liposuction of the male chest, stomach and love handles increased almost 10 percent.
These same statistics show that men underwent more than 1 million cosmetic procedures last year, close to 20 percent of all plastic surgery that was done. While many of the cosmetic procedures that have accounted for the overall large increases in plastic surgery during the last decade have been non-surgical (e.g., Botox, injectable fillers), men buck this trend. Men actually do very little of these minimally-invasive treatments and choose surgery instead.
By the very nature of most men, they usually wait longer to consider having something done and have more significant age-related and weight issues. Because Botox and injectable fillers only work to a certain point, the more significant effects of age and gravity require surgical procedures that remove and lift skin or actually removes fat to show a significant improvement.
Another trend in male plastic surgery can be seen in whom shows up to request these procedures. While once thought of as just for celebrities and high profile men, the typical male cosmetic surgery patient is just the average guy who wants to look as good as he can. The most common reason I hear is that ‘I want to look as good as I feel’. Other underlying motivations can be a recent divorce or remarriage or is driven by job security or seeking new employment. In any case, looking vigorous, fit and well rested is the new norm for aging gracefully. These leads to the middle-aged or older male seeking procedures such as eyelid tucks (blepharoplasty), necklift, nose reshaping (rhinoplasty) and hair transplantation.
The newest burgeoning area is the young male plastic surgery patient. While not subject to aging concerns, they are interested in changing their facial look albeit to have a more balanced or masculine-looking face. Seeking more of a ‘male model’ look, structural changes of the face such as rhinoplasty and cheek, chin and jaw angle implants have the younger male driven by the desire to become better looking.
While you may never see a male patient on the TV shows, such as ‘Extreme Makeover’ and the new ‘Pretty Hurts’, more men are undergoing physical changes and adjustments than ever before…they just don’t talk about it.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
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Tuesday, July 20th, 2010
Cosmetic plastic surgery has long been unintentionally gender-biased. Since the field began, the vast majority of patients who seek cosmetic enhancements, albeit it surgery or office-based treatments, have been women. Men have always made up less than 10% of most plastic surgery practices. Hollywood would lead you to believe otherwise but it just isn’t so. The only rare exception to that has been the more recent popular treatment of laser hair reduction. When it comes to hair removal, men make up about half of the patients seen with the hairy back and shoulders being the prime targets.
But more men are finding their way into the plastic surgeon’s office in the past few years. Besides a steady increase in male numbers, what is noteworthy is the change in what what men are requesting. While there remains some traditional procedures that have always been of interest, technology, societal trends, and younger men have opened up new areas of the face and body for change and improvement. Here are four of the most popular younger male (teenage to early 40s) procedures today.
Liposuction still remains the most requested male procedure. The culprits are always the same, the stomach and love handle areas. But most men that want liposuction are not fat and many are not even overweight. To the contrary, they are lean but have fat collections at the side of the waist and flanks. Even in men that work out regularly, those love handles can be impossible to work off. Today’s liposuction techniques can even give that ‘six-pack’ look for those leaner men that are not opposed to a little surgical cheating.
Chest recontouring is the one male plastic surgery procedure that is really on the rise. Male breast enlargement, known as gynecomastia, has always been an issue. But with increasing teenage weights and the present young male aesthetic for a completely flat and smooth chest, improvement in the male chest is sought out like never before. Even small nipple protrusions can be bothersome for the teenage male. Obvious man boobs are not desireable at any age.
Nose reshaping (rhinoplasty) has always been a popular male operation and that has not changed. It is the one procedure of the face that young men are not afraid to change. Noses that are big with prominent humps and wide nasal tips are bothersome and distracting to an otherwise balanced face. Sports and recreational activities make the young male nose a good target for injury causing twisted and deviated noses that often pose problems for breathing as well.
One set of procedures that is really new and undoubtably influenced by movies and models is structural facial reshaping. Creating that chiseled and angular face is what some young men aspire to achieve. A good jawline in particular is associated with enhanced masculinity. While one perceived just as making a strong chin with an implant, modern plastic surgery implants can be extended all the way to the back of the jaw. With the development of jaw angle implants, the jaw line can become more defined than just with a chin implant alone.
A new generation is redefining male plastic surgery. Have a lean body, flat chest, and a nose and jaw line that creates a well defined face has probably never been out of style. But modern surgical developments make them more attainable than ever before.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
Tags: chin and jaw angle implants, dr barry eppley, gynecomastia reduction, indianapolis, liposuction, male plastic surgery, plastic surgery, rhinoplasty Posted in Newspaper Articles | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 14th, 2010
Cosmetic plastic surgery has long been gender-biased with the vast majority of patients being women. While one could argue that this speaks significantly towards our societal standards and to women in general, men are increasingly having plastic surgery as well. While men still make up less than 20% of surgery and office-based cosmetic procedures, those numbers continue to increase each year.
What separates men from women in plastic surgery is two-fold. First and perhaps surprising to many, most men require extreme discretion and privacy. Men are much more sensitive to how they might be perceived by others for having plastic surgery. Secondly and not surprisingly, the type of procedures that men undergo in plastic surgery are different from women. The top male cosmetic procedures in my Indianapolis plastic surgery practice are nose reshaping (rhinoplasty), eyelid tucks (blepharoplasty), facelifts, gynecomastia reduction and liposuction.
Liposuction still remains the most requested procedure for men. Unlike women, however, male liposuction is done in the abdomen, love handle, and neck areas. Even in relatively lean individuals, fat collections at the side of the waist and flanks are common as one ages. Even in men that work out regularly, those love handles can be impossible to work off. Today’s liposuction techniques have been refined to produce better results with less risk of skin irregularities and etching procedures are now available for the leaner male who want an easy way to the ’six-pack’ abdominal look.
In younger males and teenagers, nose reshaping (rhinoplasty) remains a popular operation. Putting the nose into better balance with the rest of the face can make a significant aesthetic change. It is not commonly done in men over forty who have come to accept the shape of their nose. Changing the nose in mid-life may make one feel ‘not like themselves’. Rhinoplasty may frequently be performed with chin augmentation for an overall better facial profile. Computer imaging is used before surgery to determine what changes to make on the nose and whether chin augmentation would be beneficial.
Gynecomastia reduction is the one male plastic surgery procedure that is really on the rise. Whether it be a small protrusion of the nipple in a teenager, to a more traditional larger gynecomastia in adolescents, to the sagging and deflated appearance in the middle-aged and older male, improvement in the male chest is sought out like never before. Liposuction, nipple lifting and reduction, and pectoral implants are potential methods for male chest enhancement. Refined liposuction techniques, known as etching, provides better definition to the pectoral muscle outlines which can be combined with any of the other chest contouring procedures.
Eyelid surgery (blepharoplasty) in the male is the best way to get rid of that tired and saggy eye look. Unlike women, most men wait until they have a lot more loose eyelid skin and wrinkles before considering surgery. Browlifting is rarely done in men lest they end up having the ‘Kenny Rogers’ result. Removal of eyelid skin and fat should be conservative in men to appear less tired and more rested, not create a new look. In the more senior male, the upper eyelids can become heavy with skin hanging down onto the eyelashes resulting in obstruction of one’s vision. Upper eyelid surgery in this situation can help one see better than they have for years.
Facelifts are the most misunderstood cosmetic procedure for men. As a tuck-up for the neck and jowls, a facelift only improves the jaw line and neck angle. Like eyelid tucks, men often wait until they have a very noticeable neck wattle that may interfere with shirt closure and may move unflatteringly when the head turns. Facelifting in men is best done in moderation, producing a neck change that is improved but not too dramatic. In very large neck wattles, a direct neck lift is a simpler and easier solution with the trade-off of a thin neck scar.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana
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Sunday, April 11th, 2010
Q: My boyfriend is concerned about the size of his areolas. Do you offer areola reduction surgery? He is very interested because he feels his nipples stick out too far and his areolas are too wide. They stick out when he is in t-shirts and some clothes.
A: The nipple and areola, known in plastic surgery as the nipple-areolar complex, is a two-tiered structure. Surrounding a central protruding and darker pigmented nipple, the areola is flat and much larger in diameter. The size of this complex can be quite variable with significant amounts of nipple protrusion and very wide areolas. But the extent of these variations is largely in women since this is a functioning gland that changes as a result of pregnancy. Men rarely show such variations in size as it serves no functional purpose.
Todays’ fashion and styles, however, have placed a little more focus on the nipple-areolar complex. Men do not like when their nipple protrudes through clothing and, rarely, a few men feel that their areola is too wide. Most wider areolar concerns are in patients with gynecomastia where the breast is also larger. But wide areolas can occur when gynecomastia is not present. In women, the typical areolar diameter measurement is around 38 to 45 mms. In men, those numbers are usually half those amounts.
Both nipple and areolar reductions are simple procedures. The nipple protrusion can be flattened by a simple wedge excision without any visible scarring. The areolar diameter can be narrowed by a circumareolar excision. This does leave a fine line scar at the junction of the areolar and skin. Both can be done under local anesthesia in an office setting.
Dr. Barry Eppley
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Saturday, January 30th, 2010
In researching a plastic surgery topic this week, I came across an entertainment article in which the writer presented an opinion on the top ten plastic surgery disasters in men. Using photographs, they compared the ‘before’ and ‘after’s of several well known male celebrities- of which there is no doubt that these men have had facial work done. And I am not referring to in-office procedures such as Botox and injectable fillers. All had obvious surgical manipulation of aging facial features.
Those listed are well chronicled and include often cited celebrities such as Kenny Rogers, Gary Shandling, Carrot Top, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Jenner, Burt Reynolds and Gary Busey to name a few. While I am certain that they don’t feel unusual looking, most women would disagree. This begs the question of what is it that makes them look unnatural? Is there a common problem that they now all share?
In reviewing these pictures it appears the problem lies for many of them in the work around the eyes and cheeks. On the whole, the appearance of these men has changed to more of a feminine look. This is the result of a variety of changes that include over-elevation of the brows, a ‘pulled too tight’ appearance around the eyes, and unnatural cheek bone augmentation giving an ‘apple-cheeked’ effect. The neck and jowl lines, while no longer sagging, have changed them. In an effort to rejuvenate the aging and sagging face, they have been overlifted and plumped up too much.
This may make the skin much smoother and eliminate a lot of skin wrinkles and folds, but the end result is anything but ‘natural’ in appearance, and is a red flag that screams ‘facelift!’ to even the least discerning eye. Certainly, men care about their appearance as they age, and want to look as young as they feel. With regard to celebrities, it’s a usually a foregone conclusion that plastic surgery is a necessity in order to keep pace with the up and coming younger entertainers. However, great work – and natural looking results are never a guarantee in Hollywood surgical circles, and paying top dollar to a well-known or famous surgeon really has nothing to do with the final outcome.
To get a natural looking result in men, facial rejuvenation really has to be ‘underdone’ in comparison to that of a woman. Women can aesthetically tolerate more significant facial changes.. The goal of very smooth skin and sleek facial features simply looks better on women. Even when women have gone too far, they rarely look as bad as what can happen in men. Nips and tucks are very helpful to slow the aging process down in men, but dramatic sweeping changes simply trade-off one problem for another. Facial rejuvenation in men illustrates the age-old concept that less is often more.
Dr. Barry Eppley
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