Procedure Performed:
Male Breast Reduction
Liposuction
Procedure Performed:
Male Breast Reduction
Liposuction
How Can A Male Breast Reduction Surgery Help Me?
If you feel self-conscious about your chest or experience embarrassment, male breast reduction surgery can help to correct and create a firmer, more masculine appearance.
Male breast reduction is an effective procedure for reducing the size of breast tissue and re-contouring your chest for a more masculine appearance. Fat, breast gland tissue, and excess skin are removed, recontoured, and tightened for a smooth appearance to the chest.
This safe and effective procedure removes excess fat and glandular tissue to sculpt your chest. Depending on your needs, treatment may involve liposuction alone or surgical excision to remove glandular tissue and excess skin.
During your consultation with Dr. Sheilah A. Lynch, you can discuss your options and expectations.
Washington DC Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Sheilah Lynch, is recognized by the Washingtonian & Bethesda Magazine as a Top Doctor and an Expert in Body Reshaping and Breast Surgery. Maryland Board Certified Plastic Surgeon, Sheilah A. Lynch, MD specializes in the youthful restoration of face / neck and body after rapid weight loss surgery.
Gynecomastia affects an estimated 40 to 60 percent of men. It may affect only one breast or both. Though certain drugs and medical problems have been linked with male breast tissue overdevelopment, there is no known cause in the vast majority of cases.
For men who feel self-conscious, male breast reduction surgery will help.
This procedure removes fat and/or glandular tissue from the breasts, and after rapid weight loss, male breast reduction can remove excess hanging or droopy skin, resulting in a flatter, firmer, and better-contoured chest.
Breast development in men can occur at any age, but happens most during the infant, teen, and 50+ age years, due to hormonal fluctuations that generally occur at these times.
They can include:
- various prescribed medications
- street drugs
- obesity
- liver disease
- kidney disease
- hypothyroidism
- tumors of the testes