Outcome of mammary prostheses explantation : A patient perspective

A retrospective study to characterize determinants of subjective outcome following removal of silicone gel-filled mammary implants was undertaken. One hundred consecutive female patients (aged 24 to 69 years, mean 46 years) who underwent removal of implants were surveyed. Eighty-two patients had mam...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of plastic surgery 1996-06, Vol.36 (6), p.594-600
Hauptverfasser: SVAHN, J. K, VASTINE, V. L, LANDON, B. N, DOBKE, M. K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A retrospective study to characterize determinants of subjective outcome following removal of silicone gel-filled mammary implants was undertaken. One hundred consecutive female patients (aged 24 to 69 years, mean 46 years) who underwent removal of implants were surveyed. Eighty-two patients had mammary implants for cosmetic indications, 17 for postmastectomy reconstruction, and 1 for correction of congenital breast absence. The survey was conducted 6 to 12 months after explantation. Sixty-three patients (63%) returned questionnaires. Fifty-one patients were satisfied with the overall outcome of explantation (81% of respondees). Quality of life, as measured by self-assessed physical and cognitive functions, and improvement of symptoms attributed by the patients to the presence of implants, improved in 49 patients (78%), worsened in 2 patients (3%), and has not changed in 12 patients (19%). Twenty-one patients (33%) judged postexplantation and/or breast recontouring surgery aesthetic outcome as expected, 26 (41%) as an improvement better than expected, 9 (14%) judged their appearance as worse than expected, and 7 have not responded. Twenty-three patients (37%) perceived their postoperative course as "complicated" (scarring, inflammation, infection, seroma, asymmetry, distortion of breast contour, among those items listed). Five patients (8%) complained of mastalgia (not present prior to explantation). However, only 1 patient stated that the "complications" changed her opinion about "benefits" of this procedure. Sixty respondents (95%) indicated that comprehensive informed consent prior to explantation was instrumental in their acceptance of the outcome. If convinced that implants are safe, fifteen patients (24%) would and 41 patients (65%) would not like implants "back," and 7 patients (11%) gave no answer. Analysis of the patients' perspective should help to care for patients who contemplate or have undergone surgery with mammary implants.
ISSN:0148-7043
1536-3708
DOI:10.1097/00000637-199606000-00006