Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The True Price of Cheap Cosmetic Surgery

Cosmetic surgery that saves you money, uses only local anesthesia and lets you control the results: Sounds like a great deal, right? In reality, the new Awake procedures are a way for barely trained surgeons to profit from dangerous operations no hospital would let them do. SELF investigates the true price of "bargain" makeovers.

Paulette Hacker couldn't stop screaming. Lying on her side on a gurney, wearing only a bra and panties, she felt as if she were being stabbed again and again. In a way, she was. Through incisions in her upper back, a stainless steel tube called a cannula was suctioning out her excess fat.

"Please stop! You're hurting me!" she cried to her doctor. Because although Hacker's body was limp and her mind bleary from an unknown combination of drugs she'd been given through pills and a gas mask, the 38-year-old was awake partway through the second day of liposuction on her back, underarms, abdomen, hips and neck. That was the whole point: She was undergoing the new and aggressively marketed Awake cosmetic surgery, which is performed under local anesthesia.

"You can't scream, Paulette," a gruff voice answered her. Hacker hazily realized that the voice did not belong to her doctor; the man performing her operation was a stranger whom Hacker would later discover was a physician's assistant. According to Hacker, whose experience is also detailed in a Los Angeles Superior Court complaint, she could see people coming and going into the "operating room"—more like an oversize exam room—at the Rodeo Drive office of Craig Alan Bittner, M.D., a "liposculpture" practitioner in Los Angeles. (Through his attorney, Dr. Bittner strongly denies all of Hacker's allegations.)

"Move her into the TV room—she's making too much noise," a confused and terrified Hacker heard another voice say. Her gurney was rolled down the hall and into a second room, where she could see the assistant jab her while he watched a basketball game playing in the background on a wall-mounted television. The volume was cranked up loud enough to drown out her cries.

After the five-hour operation, Hacker says the assistant and an office clerk yanked her to her feet and squeezed her into compression garments. Dazed and sobbing, she struggled into her clothes and found herself face-to-face with a beaming Dr. Bittner. The doctor gently asked why she was crying, she says. Then he maneuvered her beside him and told her to smile for a photo.

Hacker had been excited to fly down two days earlier from Sacramento, California. The stay-at-home mom weighed 233 pounds and was trying to slim down; she'd lost 22 pounds on her own through diet and exercise—mostly jogging—and now felt she could use some help. But she'd never had elective surgery before and feared having general anesthesia.

Surfing the Web, Hacker had discovered the Awake procedure, which was advertised as a cheaper and more medically advanced alternative to lipo—and, for those inclined, to abdominoplasty and breast enhancement, too. The price was right: Awake lipo with Dr. Bittner would cost only about $700 for each body part, versus about $3,000 if she had regular plastic surgery. She found it comforting that the lipo would be performed in a doctor's cozy office, not in an intimidating outpatient surgical center or hospital. Best of all to Hacker, Awake ads promised that patients would remain lucid throughout the operation and even be able to interact with their doctor. "I liked the idea that I'd be awake and in control," Hacker remembers. "The surgery really looked like it was for me."

Full Article: http://www.self.com/health/2011/01/cheap-cosmetic-surgery

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Monday, October 3, 2011

Awake Mistake – Physician Scope Drift Is A Killer

There is a fascinating and terrifying article in the January, 2011 Self Magazine entitled “Under The Knife.” This article is about the latest and scariest trend in plastic surgery, “awake surgery.” It documents several mind-bending horror stories for awake liposuction, breast implant surgery, and tummy tucks, which are essentially power screaming torture sessions. Awake surgery is being promoted by a group of non-plastic surgeons who have learned these procedures during weekend courses rather than years of plastic surgery residency. Typically the patients are given a small amount of oral sedation such as Valium. Then a Lidocaine containing solution is injected into the area of liposuction or into the breast to achieve numbness. After that the procedure is undertaken by a doctor who uses more hope than skill. Supposed advantages are that this avoids the risk of general anesthesia, which can cause one death in 200,000 to 300,000 patients. Unfortunately, the amount of local anesthetic that sometimes has to be injected for this to work flirts with the level of known toxicity and can also cause death. Death from too much local anesthetic can occur hours after surgery because the local levels actually build up in the blood over time. So in other words, the toxic levels may begin to cause reaction hours after the patient has gone home.

The worst problem however is inadequate pain control. In the end, some patients simply feel more than others for reasons that are not clear. So some patients undergoing these awake surgeries will not know that they are going to feel significant pain until the pain starts. Once the patient has been giving the limit of local anesthesia and they are still experiencing extreme pain, two things can happen. Number one, the doctor continues and tries to ignore the patient’s screams, or, when the screaming is too much to bear the doctor stops and does an inadequate removal which will likely need to be repaired by a real Board Certified plastic surgeon.

In breast implant cases, this technique allows the practitioner to put the implant under the breast but not under the muscle. In order to release the muscle, which allows the implant to be inserted under, it takes general anesthesia. With an inadequate muscle release, the implants never settle and can often take on a funny shape. The article cites one case in Las Vegas where an implant actually began to work its way back out of the incision days later! That patient ended up needing emergency surgery where it was discovered that the doctor who placed the implants had done a butcher job on her and even left some random sutures in the pocket.

The other disturbing issue for these procedures is the amount of time they appear to take. Although technically it is safer to do a longer procedure under local then the six-hour limit which we accept for general anesthesia, there is no reason to keep the patient on the table for eight hours or spread a simple liposuction into two or three days which is apparently what these doctors do. In my hands a three area liposuction takes about three hours under anesthesia. A breast augmentation takes about 45 minutes. There is no reason at all why these should be expanded to eight hour torture sessions but for some reason, the skill levels or the difficulties presented by trying to do these surgeries under local appear to expand the surgical time by a factor of four.

Why is there this new interest in awake surgery? Well there are several reasons. Number one to do the awake surgeries you don’t need an operating room. You can do it in any old exam room. Number two it opens up the procedure is to family doctors, gynecologists, internists, and emergency room doctors who are struggling financially with insurance reimbursements. It doesn’t matter if they have often minimal or no surgical training or background. Number three monitoring of operating facilities is based on the level of anesthesia. So in other words, the less anesthesia you use for your procedures, the less oversight there is.

That is to say, if you have an M.D., you can do any surgical procedure in your office including a heart transplant if you do it under local. As soon as you do some sort of sedation you are subject to accreditation and oversight. Most of these offices that do awake procedures would never survive scrutiny in the light of day. Tiny cramped operating rooms, (and I use that term loosely), which are subject to contamination, lack of sterility, lack of gowning by the so-called surgeon and his staff are all issues. There is no accreditation or peer review. There is no one looking at these dirty deeds done dirt cheap.

Full Article: http://www.drkmd.com/2010/12/29/awake-plastic-surgery/

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