Plastic Surgery for Men




In today’s world both women and men want to appear youthful and so it is not unusual to find men of all ages getting plastic surgery done for purely cosmetic reasons. Like women, men request surgery to change how their noses look, make their faces look younger or even receive liposuction. There a many things that differ with regards to plastic surgery for men. These include the thickness of their skin and the way their facial hair grows. If a man chooses to get a face lift then his surgeon will determine if he has a receding hairline and will consider the fullness of his sideburns. He will also look for facial scars, sun damage and saggy skin on the neck. The skin on a man’s face receives a greater blood supply than a woman’s skin does which means that a man’s face will bleed more during surgery. This also means that men face a higher risk of having a hematoma, or pool of blood form underneath the skin following their procedure. Another factor to consider is that since men don’t normally wear makeup, they will find it difficult to hide any scarring that may occur as a result of their surgery.


Other procedures that men can opt for are calf implants, pectoral implants, and having a form of liposuction done on their abdomens that creates a rippled look. These are all fairly new procedures so if a man is thinking about having any of these procedures done he needs to make sure he speaks with a board-certified plastic surgeon that is skilled in these techniques.
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There are many reasons for women to have cosmetic surgery on their breasts and it's not always for the reason some of Hollywood's starlets and Playboy Bunnies would lead you to believe.

Sure, the most popular reason for breast augmentation may be for a woman who is less than well-endowed to have plastic surgery, could very well be to enlarge and/or enhance their God-given supply. We see it all the time and it's actually become something to be newsworthy and reported on - not just entertainment channels but on the Evening News, that some actress, feeling physically inadequate, will go under the knife and have her breasts enlarged, lifted or enhanced in order to save her career. Maybe that works for some people and if that is the case, I'm really glad the option for breast enhancements is available to them.

My main concern with that scenario is that if someone is getting a breast enhancement because they are feeling inadequate or are trying to impress a director, what happens when

the role they are vying for is over and they are left with altered breasts?

I have a close friend who spent years and years in pain because of the size of her breasts and the best gift she ever gave to herself was the gift of a breast reduction. She has related that the only regret she has about the surgery is waiting until her 50s to get it done! I'm sure the first thought, when discussing plastic surgery and breasts is not about decreasing their size; but that is as important to people like my friend in finding some relief from the strain on their backs and the activities they are restricted from doing because of their size.

Another really good reason for breast plastic surgery is to help women who have had breast cancer and a full or half mastectomy. It's a difficult enough experience to be faced with cancer, but for a woman to have to sacrifice the part of her body that is outwardly sexual, can be devastating. Many women regard their breasts as the part of them that makes them women; whether they have breast-fed children or not, knowing that our bodies are MADE to feed our children after birth, says everything about being a woman. I mean, it's not like the body has to do anything special in order for the breast feeding process to take place; all a woman needs to do is have a baby and the human body does the rest. So it is understandable that when, due to a health crisis, causes these parts of the body to be removed, it can be described as being "stripped of their womanhood." Now just imagine if the cancer-surviving woman were unable to have her marred body repaired - how awful would that be? The good news is that when a woman has had to have a mastectomy, insurance will almost always pay for the reconstruction, and that's just less she will need to worry about in regards to her illness. 22tracheal Shave22
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