Press Release from The University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center at Dallas
Contact: Ione Echeverria (214)648-3404 or e-mail: ione.echeverria@utsouthwestern.edu
DALLAS - July 12, 2001 - A new liposuction device that varies the
amount of ultrasound used is enabling UT Southwestern Medical Center at
Dallas plastic surgeons to help patients recover with less bruising and
discomfort than traditional ultrasound-assisted liposuction.
UT Southwestern physicians treating patients at Zale Lipshy
University Hospital are using pulsed ultrasound-assisted liposuction to
pinpoint the amount of energy necessary for effective emulsification of
fat, while avoiding the adverse effects of ultrasonic energy.
Traditional ultrasound-assisted liposuction (UAL), refined by UT
Southwestern plastic surgeons, uses the energy of high-frequency sound
waves to liquefy fat before it is removed with low-pressure suction.
Some plastic surgeons prefer UAL because it provides an "airbrush
effect" that creates a smoother treatment to an area.
"The main problem with using an ultrasonic device continuously is
that it can develop cumulative effects of energy and heat," said Dr.
Jeffrey Kenkel, vice chairman of plastic surgery at UT Southwestern.
"Heat is a thermal byproduct of ultrasound that can cause burns,
temporarily injure nerves and prolong recovery."
Pulsed UAL allows a surgeon to vary the amount of ultrasound by
switching to an optional pulsed mode, which breaks up the energy at
one-tenth second intervals.
This device provides an alternative for the more than 230,000
Americans who undergo liposuction every year. According to the American
Society of Plastic Surgeons, liposuction is one of the most common
cosmetic procedures performed in the United States. Between 1992 and
1999 the number of liposuction procedures increased by 389 percent.
In an earlier study published in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery,
Kenkel and Dr. Rod Rohrich, chairman of plastic surgery at UT
Southwestern, found that sensory nerves take 10 weeks to regenerate
with ultrasound rather than six weeks with traditional suction. Since
pulsed UAL focuses the energy, it should correct the side effect of
nerve desensitization.
"Any time you treat an area there is a loss of sensation. But the
length of time may decrease now that less energy is being used," Kenkel
said. "The challenge is to use just the right amount of energy to
accomplish your goal without the side effects."
Kenkel and Rohrich published the first and only medical text on UAL
in 1998: Practical Applications in Body Sculpting Surgery. They have
taught the innovative technique to more than 2,000 plastic surgeons.
For more information on pulse ultrasound-assisted liposuction, call
214-648-3571.
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