Breast Lift in Costa Mesa CA
Breast Lift in Costa Mesa section, includes general infrmation about Breast Lift Procedure, Breast Lift Costa Mesa Local News, Breast Lift Costa Mesa Surgeon Locator and other Breast Lift related material.
Breast Lift Procedure
A mastopexy or breast lift is a surgical procedure performed to reshape the breast and return it to a more youthful position. Drooping of the breast may occur after pregnancy as well as aging. Frequently a breast implant may be used in conjunction with a breast lift in order to achieve better results. Depending on the amount of breast lifting that needs to be accomplished, different techniques may be used that involve different incisions. Generally, the more lifting that is required, the larger the incision (and therefore the scar).
Other Breast Lift Procedures
All Breast Procedures
Breast Lift costa-mesa (current)
costa-mesa Breast Reduction
costa-mesa Breast Implants
costa-mesa Implant Removal
costa-mesa Armpit Incision
More Costa Mesa info...
Costa Mesa Buy
South Coast Plaza. An enormous shopping mall that is so large that it has its own zip code! Shops include the high-end boutiques that are also found on Beverly Hills' Rodeo Drive as well as chain stores such as Gap and Abercrombie & Fitch. It is accessible from the 405 and 5 freeways.
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Plastic Surgery News...
- Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited (TSE: 4502) and Affymax, Inc. (Nasdaq: AFFY) announced that Takeda has dosed the first patient in the United States in a clinical trial of the investigational new drug, Hematide(TM), for the treatment of anemia in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Background For decades, the photodistributed blue-gray skin hyperpigmentation observed after amiodarone therapy was presumably attributed to dermal lipofuscinosis. Using electron microscopy and high-performance liquid chromatography, we identified amiodarone deposits in the hyperpigmented skin sample from a patient treated with this antiarrhythmic agent. Our findings therefore indicate that the hypothesis relating the blue-gray hyperpigmentation to lipofuscin should be challenged.
Observations A 64-year-old man, skin phototype III, presented with asymptomatic skin hyperpigmentation that had been slowly developing on sun-exposed areas since April 2004. He had been taking amiodarone for 4 years (cumulative dose, 277 g). Electron microscopy did not show lipofuscin pigments in his skin. Conversely, abundant electron-dense membrane-bound granule deposits were observed in most of the dermal cells (fibroblasts, macrophages, pericytes, Schwann cells, and endothelial cells), especially in photoexposed skin. High-performance liquid chromatography confirmed that the skin deposits were composed of amiodarone. These results demonstrate that amiodarone hyperpigmentation is related to drug deposition on photoexposed skin.
Conclusion Amiodarone-related hyperpigmentation should be considered a skin storage disease that is secondary to drug deposition.