Posts Tagged ‘surgery’

Important Benefits Of Fat Grafting

Sunday, June 5th, 2011

Fat grafting is becoming a popular procedure, these days. Many people are choosing this technique instead of surgery for augmentation. The procedure involves removing fatty tissue from one area of the body, and implanting it into another area. This is usually done with a syringe, or with liposuction. Here are some of the ways that people are benefiting from the procedure.

Serving a Dual Purpose

When you remove fatty deposits from places like the inner thigh or abdomen, it is a good way to shape the body. Also, when you take this fat and improve the look of another body part, you are serving two uses in one. This technique is considered to be safe, as there is very little chance for rejection from the body. This will give you fewer chances for complications, and there is no surgery involved.

Removing Wrinkles

Many people suffer with facial wrinkles, as they can make one look tired and old. For example, you may suffer with bags under the eyes. Fat grafting can remove this problem, and make you look younger without plastic surgery.

Perhaps you have laugh lines or maybe wrinkles in the forehead. Instead of botox or surgery, you may wish to have your own fatty tissue injected under the skin. This can make the face appear fuller and smooth out many wrinkles.

Breast Augmentation Procedures

Many women are choosing breast augmentation techniques, these day. It may be for cosmetic reasons, but it may be for reconstruction purposes also. By using your own body tissues, instead of silicone or saline, there are much fewer chances for complications.

Final Thoughts

If you are considering body augmentation, you might wish to check into fat grafting. This method involves removing fatty deposits from the abdomen or inner thigh, and transplanting them to the face, breasts, or other areas. The tissue is removed with a syringe or by liposuction. Because it uses your own tissues, it is considered to be safer than other methods. There also is no surgery needed.

To find more information about Celulas madres adultas, or if you are looking for the best botox marbella clinic, be sure to visit our website where we provide more information on these services.

Contact Lenses Or Spectacles?

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Has your eyesight deteriorated to the stage where you have to wear spectacles? Are you happy about that? Well, there are a number of alternatives available nowadays, so you do have other choices. If you do not want to undergo surgery, you can still choose contact lenses. In fact, contact lenses have been a feasible alternative to spectacles for decades.

Surgery can be a more permanent solution to problems with eyesight, but for various reasons, some people do not want to take up this option. This leaves contact lenses as the best alternative. The first thing to notice about contact lenses is that most people will not know that you are wearing them. This is very important to some people and not important to others at all.

Contact lenses offer better all-round or peripheral vision than spectacles. When you look to the side wearing spectacles, there is no glass there, but contact lenses cover your entire pupil so that your vision is closer to normal. This is safer if you are driving a car or riding a bike or even trying to cross a road.

Another difficulty that numerous people find with spectacles is that they leave indentations on the nose. Some people find these unsightly. Spectacles also need frequent cleaning, which numerous people consider maddening, whereas contact lenses are cleaned by the eyes’ normal cleaning system - in other words, automatically.

Stylists also think that their prescription spectacles have to go with what they are wearing. This can mean that you have to have a dozen pairs of glasses. If your eyesight deteriorates further, which is fairly probable, all those specs will have to be up-graded as well. This is not true with contact lenses of course.

Both glasses and contact lenses can adjust for astigmatism or bad eyesight, which comes to most people after the age of forty. Sometimes earlier and occasionally later, but it will happen. Your choice, if you do not want to undergo surgery, is whether you would rather wear spectacles or contact lenses.

In the past, contact lenses were very expensive, which is why many people still discount using them, but in fact it is no longer the case. Contact lenses are more costly, but not much more now. In fact, you can buy disposable contact lenses and many people do do that.

The fact is that there are better alternatives to wearing either contacts or spectacles, but most individuals do not know it. It is possible these days to have one eye operation and never have to wear specs again. Or you could have laser surgery and almost certainly not need glasses again for ten or twenty years, but some people are adverse to having surgery and so they opt for spectacles or contacts.

In the long run, surgery is almost definitely less costly than wearing contact lenses and wearing contact lenses is almost definitely cheaper than wearing glasses, but it is the same with most items, people only look at the up-front costs and cheaper is seldom better.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on several topics, but is now involved with Designer Spectacles. If you want to know more, please go over to our web site at Spectacles Direct.

The Reason For A Non Surgical Facelift

Monday, May 30th, 2011

Having a non surgical facelift is a much better option than having surgery which involves anesthesia and cutting. It is an option which will help you continue your work and life as usual. There is no risk involved and you are able to see the effective results almost immediately.

It works on the basis of skin tightening. There are no incisions or cutting involved as in surgical procedures. This type of treatment deals with the sagging of the skin. Even though the skin’s “appearance” is improved, it is found that it is a lot healthier than the traditional procedure.

Several methods of this type of procedure are available. Different ones would work differently on different skin types. It also depends on how thick your skin is. It is therefore a good idea to find a professional to analyze your skin for you. This will assist greatly in your choice of treatment.

The heating of the collagen is one such treatment which has become very popular. This is simply because there is almost an immediate improvement in the appearance of the skin. As the collagen is heated it heals and renews and gives a supportive dermis. This layer supports the top layer which appears visually tighter.

This kind of treatment takes longer than the surgical lift, but it comes at a far cheaper cost. It also supports those with darker skins in that laser and skin peels can cause blotches and the usual lifts can cause visible scarring.

The skin treatment which uses radio frequency waves has also become quite popular. This is similar to the previous treatment, but it restores the cells in the deeper skin layer. It also works with concentrated radio frequency waves which also uses heat to stimulate the process of growth.

Learn more about our ground breaking non surgical face lift by visiting our website Marbella cosmetic surgery and discover what it can do for you.

All About Fat Grafting Techniques And Procedures

Saturday, May 21st, 2011

There are a variety of different procedures which are designed in correcting facial lines as well as other areas which may be problematic. One which has become very popular in recent years is called fat grafting, and because of recent advances doctors can now easily use this technique to help patients reduce wrinkles and minimize sagging skin.

The way the method works, a doctor will take your body fat from another part of the body, some places will be the hips, upper thighs and stomach and buttocks. The body fat will then be refined and filtered, and is then inserted immediately below the skin, including places on the face or neck region, and will give really organic results.

For many folks the outcome will be long term, even though this really is dependent on just how much excess fat is getting injected, and also the quantity that will be required so as to obtain the specified look the affected person is looking for.

One of the major advantages is that this is a minimally invasive procedure. The patient usually can return to their normal activities very quickly and there is a short recovery time. The results will be very natural looking, although the change may seem quite dramatic at first. You should ask your doctor to look at some before and after photographs of other patients, so that you can see some examples of how it works.

As with every kind of surgical treatment, there might be some possible unwanted side effects and dangers concerned. A few of these could consist of extreme bleeding or swelling, and in extremely uncommon occurrences, infection. The doctor will go over any any suggestions that should be followed before and after your surgical treatment.

Fat grafting can be an extremely beneficial method for a lot of people who are wanting to improve their appearance, especially with lines and wrinkles on the face. If you feel this is something you want to have performed, you should make an appointment with your cosmetic surgeon right away.

Looking for a non surgical facelift, then visit our website where we explain how our fat grafting procedure can rejuvenate your face using fat injection. Visit www.RogerAmar.com to find out more.

Eye Tests For Spectacles And Contact Lenses

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Before you can buy contact lenses, or specs either for that matter, you will need to undergo an eye test. However, the eye test for contact lenses is a little more detailed than a test for ordinary glasses, so you ought to tell the optometrist which sort of lens you prefer before the test starts in order to save time.

An eye test will usually start with a physical examination of your eyes for signs of eye disease such as cataracts and glaucoma or general problems such as high blood pressure or diabetes. This is why it is so vital to have an eye test at least every two years, because a medical doctor does not give routine checks for cataracts, diabetes or glaucoma, the three of which can make you blind.

Your optometrist might ask other questions as well such as why you would prefer to have contact lenses rather than glasses and whether you have had any trouble with your eyes. The decision to wear contact lenses or specs is entirely yours, although in some countries specs might be free whereas there may be a charge for contact lenses because they are more expensive.

The results of the optometrist’s test will yield a set of numbers which will tell an optician the strength of the lens required for each eye as the lens required for each eye is usually different. This is commonly referred to as your prescription. Then you take this prescription to an optician to pick your spectacle frames, if you are having spectacles, and to have your lenses made or and installed.

In the case of spectacles, lenses will either have to be cut or and adjusted for the frames that you would like and in the case of contact lenses, you might have to have the lenses made. In either case, you may be lucky enough to walk out of the shop wearing your specs or contacts or you might have to return in a couple hours or even a couple days. No optician worth his salt will sell you expensive lenses without a prescription.

There is an clear important difference between spectacles and contact lenses - contacts have to make contact with your eyeballs and not all eyeballs are precisely the same shape. Therefore, if you want contacts, the optometrist will have to measure the exact curvature or the exact shape of your eyes and this will become part of your prescription. Some eyes are naturally drier than others and this can have an effect on the sort of contact lenses that you should purchase.

Your optician will then often give you a pair of trial contact lenses and require you to return a couple of days later for further tests. You may have to try out several types of contacts before you find a type or marque that suits your particular eyes and sight.

Once you have contacts that appear to suit, you will have to follow the directions and advice that comes with them and return for your check-ups when you are asked to. These follow-ups are vital to ensure that the contact lenses are not aggravating your eyes or causing more significant issues.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on several topics, but is now concerned with Designer Spectacles. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Spectacles Direct.

Cataracts And Regaining Sight

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

When I was about forty years of age, I could feel that I would soon need glasses. I worked long hours in an office at a computer and most of my friends thought that this was the cause of my diminishing eyesight. I only put the specs on like everyone else does and got on with the job.

However, ten years later, my eyesight took a sudden turn for the worse and I was diagnosed with premature senile cataracts, at least that is how they translated it into English from the Thai as I had by now married a Thai lady and moved to her village in rural northern Thailand. I went to a very decent hospital in Pattaya known as the Bangkok Pattaya Hospital and one of their senior eye surgeons examined me.

She confirmed the diagnosis and added that it was to be expected that the other eye would develop a cataract at some time in the future although there was no sign of it at that moment. The next day she carried out an operation to remove the lens from my eye and replace it with a plastic one.

The operation is quite painless although it can get a bit scary and lasts between thirty and sixty minutes. Mine was ‘a long one’, said the surgeon at forty minutes. After an hour’s recovery, a nurse showed my wife and me how to care for my eye and I was permitted to go. My eye was taped up, so I could not see out of it until that evening when my wife put the drops in.

Everything was so vivid and clear. It was truly amazing. I had to keep going back for post-operative care for four weeks and then we went back to the village. I cannot convey how fantastic it was to be able to see clearly again without glasses after what I realized was more than a decade.

The eye or the brain or both take a a little time to adjust to the new lens and your eyesight improves for a period of time which can be from six to twenty-four months. Within six months, my other eye began to pack up. It had borne the strain of two eyes for long enough and now that there was a working replacement, it decided to quit fighting the impending cataract and gave up.

I was not back to square one because my plastic eye was far better that the other one had been in comparable circumstances. So, about six months later, I went back to Pattaya to get the other one done. The operation was the same with the same surgeon. I went back the next day for the check up, but it was a long wait for my turn and the time came around for my drops. My wife put them in but as I removed my protective eye-covering, I noticed the English-language newspaper on the table in front of me.

That was not extraordinary, but what was certainly curious was that I could read it - without glasses for the first time in fifteen years! I could see the look of revulsion on my fellow patients’ faces as they looked into my eye so I put the covering back on. (After the operation the eye swells up and it as black as an eight-ball with a blood-red dot in the middle - it is quite scary).

When I went in to see the surgeon and told her about the newspaper, she smiled. “Yes”, she said, “that was my surprise, I put a long-distance lens in last time and a reading lens in this time. Your brain will decide what you are looking at and use the correct eye”.

She had not told me because a small percentage of brains cannot perform this trick, which is why some people cannot take to variofocals too.

That was a year ago and both plastic eyes and brain have ‘bedded in’ nicely. I can read a book and drive a car without specs and my world is so brilliant. I still wonder at the brightness everyday. I had not noticed the light getting gradually dimmer for fifteen years.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on several topics, but is now involved with Designer Spectacles. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Spectacles Direct.

Modern Times And Eye Problems

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Not so long ago, it was not at all uncommon to see blind people walking the streets tap-tapping away with their white sticks, being guided by a dog, normally a Labrador, but I have not seen anyone like that in Britain for years, as far as I remember.

That has to be a good thing; it must mean that we are starting to cure or at least assuage most kinds of blindness.

My aunty had cataracts for years when I was a kid in the Sixties - it was just one of those things. Some people got them once they were old and others did not.

My brother’s mother-in-law had cataracts in the late Nineties and she was put on a two year waiting, but at least she had hope and they were going to be removed free of charge.

I do not know of anyone else that has eye trouble except myself. I could not rub my glasses clean one day and then a friend said he saw a white dot in one eye. He drove me to the hospital and the optician said that I had ‘premature senile cataracts’.

Well, I live in Thailand now and he did not use those precise words. He told me that the cataracts were because I was prematurely senile.

I asked him if that was what he actually intended; he looked it up in a book and we both had a hearty laugh about it, although he never actually corrected himself. My condition turned out to be a little bit worse than just cataracts, but when I went from the local hospital to a major hospital in Pattaya, the surgeon saw me within 30 minutes and asked me if I wanted them removed.

I said that I did and she was prepared to do the operation there and then. I got it postponed by 24 hours, but she would have sorted my eye out that day in a 30 minute operation, which does not require anaesthetic. I thought that that was marvelous.

We have come a long way from routinely seeing blind people on the street and putting up with cataracts through a two-year waiting list to immediate removal of cataracts by laser surgery in 40-50 years.

At least we have in the Developed World and in the East too, if you have the money. There are still millions of people in Asia and particularly in Africa suffering blindness and partial blindness for the sake of an easy 30 minute operation.

Two weeks after my surgery, my other eye began to cloud over. It was as if it had been holding on with its last scrap of strength until I got his mate sorted out. I had that one done last year and once I was permitted to remove my patch and look around me with two decent eyes again for the first time in a decade, I could not believe that I had forgotten how bright the world actually is and that I had not noticed how dingy my world had gotten.

If you are worried about an eye operation, do not be. What you will experience when you can see properly again will make all the worry seem ludicrous and if you get the opportunity to give someone their eyesight back, please do it.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with macular degeneration glasses. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Macular Degenerative Disease

Dry Eyes And Contact Lenses

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

When you begin to lose your eyesight, which occurs to most of us at around the age of forty, you have two basic choices: glasses or contact lenses. Both contact lenses and spectacles have their advantages and disadvantages, so whichever you select is certainly a personal decision. However, some people have ‘dry eyes’, which means that the tear ducts do not irrigate the eyes as much as standard.

If someone has dry eyes, then wearing glasses will not exacerbate the condition, but if someone with dry eyes decides to wear contact lenses for personal reasons, the condition can make their lives very unpleasant.

Some people who wear contacts but have dry eyes will almost certainly experience a discomfort that will lead to the person rubbing their eyes, which will make the situation worse.

There may be medical reasons for the lacrimal ducts not making enough moisture to lubricate the eyes, but age can be a factor. If you have itchy eyes and are over sixty, it might be in your interests to switch from contacts to spectacles.

Some people find it a very hard decision to take. TV personalities and film stars seldom like to be photographed wearing specs. All right, there are not too many of them, but there are hundreds of millions of individuals who look up to their screen idols and copy them blindly.

One of the causes of dry eyes, apart from age or personal illness, is environmental conditions. Pollution affects different crowd in different ways, but tobacco smoke affects most peoples’ eyes, to say nothing of their lungs.

Evaporation is another reason for dry eyes. This sounds strange, because you would think that the water trapped between the eyes and the lenses could not evaporate, but many contact lenses are composed of fifty percent water to make them more flexible and therefore more comfortable.

A warm environment will evaporate water from the lenses and the lenses will endeavor to replenish themselves by sucking water off your eyes - a kind of osmosis. This is a sensible reason for soaking your contact lenses in a solution over night. The solution is there to sterilize the lenses, but it will also permit the lenses to ‘fill up’ again.

Therefore, a possible solution to the problem of dry eyes, if evaporation is your problem, is to replace your lenses half way through the day. another way of combatting dry eyes if you would like to wear contacts, is to put drops in your eyes every hour.

You can purchase these drops from a chemist in small containers or you can purchase a litre of the solution and refill your droppers yourself. However, a saline solution (salt and water) is just as good as anything and a great deal cheaper.

If none of this works for you then why not just switch to spectacles? The trend is to be more open about oneself and part of this trend is to admit your age, wear your wig openly, if that is what you do and be| seen wearing your spectacles.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with Designer Spectacles. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Spectacles Direct.

Eye Care After A Lasik Operation

Sunday, May 1st, 2011

The patient of Lasik surgery has two foremost responsibilities regarding his or her eyes: firstly to pick a responsible, skilled surgeon, which should not be very difficult and secondly, to take care of his eyes after the operation by following the guidance of the surgeon on post-operative care. This second part is very important and should not be taken lightly.

The post-operative supervision procedure is not a problem, but if you are worried about it, you should enquire of your surgeon what it will entail before the procedure. The physician or a nurse will be able to explain the procedure of care to you in detail or they will give you a pamphlet.

There may be some peculiar sight aberrations for a couple of days after the operation, some of which are fairly normal. One of the most common aberrations that are standard for a couple of days are halos around lights.

However, you ought to be certain that you understand the difference between what is standard and so no grounds for concern and what ought to be reported instantly

There are various Lasik procedures and the procedures are advancing all the time so it is not possible to give exact details in this piece. Moreover, the shape of the eyes and the causes for deteriorating eyesight are peculiar to each patient.

Some of the advice that your Lasik surgeon might give for your post-operative eye care may include the following, although different doctors may have their own recommendations.

The first thing is to remember that you have just had an operation including anaesthetic. There might not have been any blood but it was surgery all the same.

All patients are desired to take it easy after an operation and you will be no exception. If you had had an operation on your knee, you would use it as little as you could for a while and the same is good advice for your eye.

Attempt to sleep for a couple of hours after the operation or at least close your eyes and rest. Infection is the chief anxiety, so do not poke or rub your eye and do not strain it by trying out your recently improved eyesight by reading or watching TV.

If you have to entertain yourself in this way wear an eye patch. Your surgeon will almost certainly have given you a stiff plastic eye guard, which you should wear at all times.

Some surgeons will advise against allowing water into your eye for a few days, which means washing just from the neck down, no showering, no going out in the rain and definitely no swimming.

Be careful with bright light, it cannot damage your eye but it does hurt. Your world will get much brighter after the operation and looking at a light bulb can become painful. Be cautious of watching moving traffic when the sun is shining, a car window can catch the sun and reflect it back into your eye unexpectedly.

You will be given eye drops so do not fail to use them. Lasik surgery can dry your eyes out, if this happens they might be able to give you alternative or supplemental drops.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now concerned with wet macular degeneration treatment. If you want to know more, please go to our website at Macular Degenerative Disease

Cataracts, Surgery And Recovery

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

You have to be so cautious with your eyes because they can so easily be damaged beyond repair. My eyesight began to deteriorate as I reached forty, like most people. My friends and family put that down to the fact that I was sitting in front of a computer screen for about twelve hours a day and had done since I was twenty-eight. Still, there was nothing I could do about that, that was my work. I was self-conscious of wearing glasses at first, but you soon become over that.

My eyes continued to get worse and at a greater rate than friends of a similar age, but I considered that that was merely the luck of the draw. However, one morning about ten years later, I woke up and it was as if my glasses were dirty. I spent the next day or two cleaning them, but I could not seem to shift the dirt on the right lens.

By that time, my vision was too bad to see without glasses and I only had the one pair. I had moved to rural Thailand and procuring a second pair was no easy feat.

After a couple of days of cleaning and polishing my glasses a friend offered to take me the 75 km to the nearest good hospital. The opthamologist looked in my eyes and said: “I am very sorry, but you are senile”. I had been called mad before, but not senile. I was fifty-two. It is not really a statement that beggars a question, so I just looked at him and put on a glum expression, hoping that I was not confirming his diagnosis.

He looked at me and then looked in his desk, pulled out a book and opened it. “You have premature senile cataracts” he corrected himself. I was not certain whether that was any better as it implied that other parts of me may start failing early as well. Anyway, I thanked him and left. I had no idea what to do next, but at least I knew better that to continue wasting my time attempting to clean my already spotless spectacles.

My wife is very practical and she arranged for us to go to an even better hospital 650 km away. I was seen by one of the hospital’s senior eye surgeons within the hour and was told that I had a cataract in my right eye and that there was a good chance that I would develop one in the left eye too. Then she shocked me by asking: “Do you want me to remove it now?”

It was too big a decision for me to make there and then without any information, so we discussed the operation, she gave me a leaflet and I made an appointment to return the next day. The next day, I was in the operating chair. I was not going to have Laser Correction, but the full replacement of the lens. The operation is carried out under local anaestetic and does not hurt but it can be uncomfortable at times.

The surgeon cut a small opening of two millimetres a little to the outside of the colour of my eye and squirted in some liquid. She then vibrated that liquid with ultra-sound to break up the lens in my eye and flushed the pieces of lens out with more fluid before inserting the new lens through the same hole.

By this stage of my life, I could just see light and dark with my right eye, but at one moment my eyesight just ceased entirely. It was like looking at a window shatter before your eyes merely to realise that there was nothing but blackness beyond. Now I definitely was blind in that eye. There was a bit of discomfort, but the surgeon kept talking to me and then she said: “Wait, wait, wait, can you see me?”

And I could.

Absolutely perfectly. Better than I would have been able to fifteen years before, but everything was so bright that it dazzled. I had not noticed how dingy my world had become. A cataract is like having a net curtain over a window, it cuts out a great deal of light. Therefore, the first thing you become aware of whilst you have had a cataract removed is a flood of light. Your world literally is a brighter place - to such an extent that the light hurts.

Be cautious with light after the surgery, it cannot cause lasting damage, but it really does hurt. A passing car can reflect sunlight into your eye and catch you unawares. If you are driving or riding a bike, it could be very dangerous. Another danger is reflection. You have an open wound on your face which can be infected by wind-borne contamination.

The week following the operation is a lot more risky than the procedure itself. You have an open cut in your eye which they do not stitch. It is left to repair itself, which is not a problem, if you take care.

You have to put two types of drops in your eye four times a day and prevent getting water in your eye at all costs. That means do not go out in the rain and do not wash your hair in the shower. Dirt and consequent infection are your biggest enemies, so put the drops in regularly, avoid dust (and the powdered dog faeces mixed in with it) and all water and be very careful of light.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a number of subjects, but is now involved with Designer Spectacles. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Spectacles Direct.