


December 2008 Newsletter
Hope or Hype?
Can Cosmetic Medicine Keep My Body Young?
Last month in this e-newsletter we discussed traditional facelifts vs. the rash of new "low-impact" mini-lifts being marketed these days. I gave you my inside track on the "hope vs. hype" truth about those.
This month let's borrow the same angle and apply it to bodies. What can Dr. Aycock do to help you maintain a firm, slender body throughout life? Which treatments available today are worth investing in, and which ones should send you running—with your hand firmly on your wallet?
I Hear It Every Day

Here are some of the body questions I get in my consulting room:
- If I do Pilates or yoga all my life, will I still have to get a Tummy Tuck when I'm older?
- How can I keep the skin on my chest from getting thin and spotted like my mother's?
- Will my hands always give away my age, or are there treatments to rejuvenate them too?
- Do all women who have children end up needing breast lifts?
While I can't answer all of your questions in one newsletter, let me touch on some main points from each decade of life. If you have further questions, you know where to find me.
The Biggie - Unwanted Fat
It's not for nothing that liposuction is the most popular plastic surgery procedure. Most bodies don't fit the slender ideal promoted by our culture.
One question I hear a lot:
- When is it "too early" to seek liposuction?
Answer: I've done liposuction on young women in their late teens and twenties - but only if their bodies warranted it. Liposuction is ideal for people with basically normal weight but with specific areas of resistant fat, such as on the outer thighs (saddlebag deformity) or the "pooch" just under the belly button for women. For men, it would be the so-called "love handles."
But liposuction is not a substitute for healthy habits. That's why a full history, evaluation and consultation are necessary for people who feel overwhelmed by their bodies' tendency to store fat.
Unfortunately, we've seen ALL ages of people who go through what we call the "chasing your tail" syndrome. They get liposuction early in life. They believe it may permanently re-set their body's fat storage system. It doesn't. But they keep trying it instead of looking for a lifestyle solution.
We Are Physicians First

We try to educate you about your body and help you find the optimum route to the body you want. Liposuction should be part of a holistic approach to body contouring that ideally also includes healthy eating and moderate exercise.
So, if I were asked, "Is liposuction appropriate for my 18-year-old?" I'd have to say that it would be a judgment call. Here you'd get the benefit of our professional overview. You wouldn't be just guessing, and we'd never subject anyone to unnecessary trauma for beauty's sake. It is typical to decide on a non-surgical option for at least 10 percent of my consultations. When surgery is the better option, we will let you know!
Can liposuction work as a jump-start to a healthier lifestyle?
Yes! We've seen it happen again and again. This is the inverse to the early-lipo issue. Mature women who have tried every diet on the planet and stayed more than that "extra ten pounds" overweight for years often get a fantastic jump-start from liposuction.
For them, getting even 10 pounds of fat off their bodies makes exercising easier. Better yet, it awakens a "fire in the belly" motivation that erases past failures and puts them over the top.
The Weight They've Dreamed Of
We've seen these patients push through months of strict regimens to arrive at the weight they dreamed of all their lives. Sometimes - and again, this is a judgment call—there can be tremendous psychological value in giving yourself a head-start. We can advise you on this issue, too.
The Next Biggie—Cellulite

Here's where the majority of scams take place. There is no way to remove those fibrous connections under the skin that result in dimpled skin. At least not yet. But some people will take your money and give you treatments. These treatments mostly just cause swelling that smoothes the surface of your skin temporarily. It does not solve the underlying problem.
There are laser treatments that are somewhat successful, and the future of cellulite treatment will probably be a laser skin tightening solution. This technology is evolving rapidly and will be a huge advance.
Our advice about cellulite, which mainly affects legs, is to make the muscles underneath the skin firmer. When you increase muscle mass, your skin stretches over a firmer surface, and often this reduces the appearance of cellulite. Good skin care, moisturization and hydration also help.
Chest Skin and Hand Skin

Technology already exists to remove brown spots, spider veins and other surface blemishes while building the collagen layer that keeps skin plump and firm. Your chest doesn't have to look like your mother's. Your hands don't have to give away your age. However, this requires maintenance.
You must begin with sunscreen protection to prevent premature damage to the tender and easily aged skin of the chest and hands. Medical grade skin care regimens with tretinoin, moisturizers and fading creams are next. Then, laser treatments as soon as you start to see damage. These regimens should be maintained—possibly over decades. Laser ablation of hand veins and fillers to plump up the top of the hands can also help.
Ask An Expert
You'll need guidance. There are dozens of lasers and hundreds of settings for each laser. Different ones apply to different skin types at different stages of life. Only an expert can apply the correct cocktail of lasers to your chest or hand skin, at every phase of life.
Do not try to guess at this, relying on a medspa aesthetician's advice. This is a complex and ever-changing aspect of cosmetic medicine for which plastic surgeons receive special training. We continue our training at medical conferences, fine-tuning our skills by sharing our results with each other. There's no substitute for experience.
Breasts

Most women are well-informed about breast surgery. There is one misconception I come across very often, and that's the idea that breast implants can be used to "lift" sagging breasts.
That simply isn't true. If your breasts have lost significant altitude because of pregnancy, breast-feeding, weight loss, or simply through aging, you will need a breast lift. (If they haven't sagged significantly, you won't.) Increasing volume is a separate issue, and if you desire that, we can certainly add implants.
Don't Look Matronly
Using implants alone to "fill" the saggy and deflated breasts DOES produce larger breasts; but they are often large, saggy breasts, which tend to look matronly. Often, we will replace volume with implants and also uplift the breasts at the same operation (a mastopexy-augmentation).
This is one of the most satisfying procedures I perform. Many women finished with childbearing feel heightened sexual desire when their breasts are restored and enlarged.
Tummy Tuck—And the Dreaded Scar
Tummy Tuck deserves its own newsletter, but let me address just one question here—the skin-only Tummy Tuck.
Young women in their 20s often finish pregnancy with loose skin on their abdomens. Perhaps they don't have loose muscles (yet), or excess fat, but the skin on their abdomens may not contract fully following pregnancy (this depends on how damaged the skin is from the stretching, how much weight was gained and on pure genetics).

Stretch marks are actually a sign that the skin has stretched too fast for the dermis to withstand (the deeper layers of the skin where the collagen resides). The dermis "tears" apart, leaving the thin epidermis, and a scar in the form of a stretch mark.
Skin-Only Tummy Tuck
The way to restore a tight-skinned belly for these women is with a skin-only Tummy Tuck. It leaves a scar across the bottom of the belly. Many women struggle with the idea of undergoing the procedure because of this scar, but we tailor the scar to hide under your bikini line. For those with loose skin AND some excess adipose, we can recontour the abdomen through the tummy-tuck WITH some liposuction at the same time.
New Treatment for Fat and Loose Skin—Great News!
I've got good news for everyone concerned with loose skin and/or fat deposits on any part of the body. We now have the recently FDA-approved "Velashape," a combination therapy consisting of infra-red and radio-frequency lasers. Velashape is quick, easy and painless. It will diminish fat and tighten skin as much as 2 centimeters on the abdomen and flanks without surgery.
Conclusion
Today's cosmetic medicine is answering problems from every decade of life, as our bodies morph from those of young girls to mature women. But the right information is essential to using it wisely. Dr. Aycock is committed to giving you state-of-the-art information, freshly minted and accurate, as this exciting medical specialty progresses.

Read More Newsletters from Dr. Aycock
- March 2010
Sculptra® Aesthetic - February 2010
New PermaLip™ Lets You Pucker Up With Confidence - January 2010
Start Your New Year With These Specials - December 2009
Are You a Weekend Peel Candidate? - November 2009
Intraceuticals Oxygen Facials - October 2009
Breast Cancer Awareness Month - September 2009
Revitalze with Fall Savings! - August 2009
End of Summer Savings - May 2009
Mother's Day Special - April 2009
Pro-Lipo Fat Reduction - February 2009
Exteme Plastic Surgery - December 2008
Cosmetic Medicine - October 2008
Non-Surgical Facial Rejuvenation - June 2008
Summer Specials - May 2008
Laser Hair Removal - April 2008
Vaser LipoSelection® - March 2008
Hand Rejuvenation - February 2008
The "Liquid Facelift" - January 2008
Cellulite Reduction with VelaShape - December 2007
Our New Sciton Laser





