ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. – With the growing
popularity of gastric bypass surgery to treat morbid obesity, plastic
surgeons saw an influx of patients in 2003 who had plastic surgery
procedures to contour their body after massive weight loss and expect
the trend to continue, according to the American Society of Plastic
Surgeons (ASPS). In fact, more than 52,000 body contouring procedures
were performed for massive weight loss patients in 2003.
ASPS, a non-profit organization, supports members in their efforts to
provide the highest quality patient care through education, research and
advocacy. As the longest established plastic surgery organization,
founded in 1931, it is the only organization with more than a decade of
plastic surgery statistics.
In just the past year ASPS saw the number of patients receiving buttock
lifts rise 74 percent, upper arm lifts increased 66 percent, thigh lifts
grew 33 percent and lower body lifts went up 14 percent. Over the past
three years, upper arm lifts jumped 1,938 percent and lower body lifts
increased 2,400 percent. Almost 70 percent of the total number of upper
arm lifts and thigh lifts in 2003 were performed on post-bariatric
patients, according ASPS statistics. Other procedures commonly performed
on patients after bariatric surgery include tummy tucks, breast lifts
and breast reductions.
“Massive weight loss over time can leave the patient with excess, baggy
skin,” said
Rod Rohrich, MD, ASPS president.
“As the number of people having gastric bypass surgery grows, it is only
natural that the number of patients needing plastic surgery to contour
their smaller bodies will increase as well. Post-bariatric surgery
usually occurs one year after the procedure or when weight loss has
plateaued for three to six months.”
The ASPS projects body contouring operations performed for post-bariatric
patients will increase at least 36 percent in 2004. This estimate is
based on the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (ASBS) projection
that more than 144,000 patients will have bariatric surgery in 2004. In
2003, more than 103,000 people underwent gastric bypass surgery in 2003,
compared with 67,000 patients who had the surgery in 2002, according to
ASBS. More than 60 percent of Americans aged 20 years and older are
overweight.
“As patients seek help in contouring their body after gastric bypass
surgery, it is important for them to keep in mind the expertise
board-certified plastic surgeons bring to the procedures,” added Dr.
Rohrich. “ASPS members are trained to not only address the extra skin
and place scars in unobtrusive areas, but to make sure the patient has a
safe surgery and a pleasing result.”
ASPS offers the most comprehensive, reliable statistics on plastic
surgery procedures. In 2003, statistics were collected through the first
online national database for plastic surgery procedures called Tracking
Operations and Outcomes for Plastic Surgeons (TOPS). This data, combined
with the annual survey sent to more than 17,000 boarded physicians in
specialties most likely to perform plastic surgery procedures, resulted
in the most authoritative report on plastic surgery procedures.