Last year, plastic surgeons and other physicians performed 600,000
liposuction procedures in the U.S. People are obsessed with thinness,
even as we get fatter every year. The lure of a quick surgical fix is
irresistible to many people, so it should not be surprising that
liposuction is the most popular elective surgery in the world. The
method involves anesthetizing patients, injecting fluid into the area to
loosen the fat cells, and sucking out the fluid and fat cells through a
tube called a cannula. Malcolm Paul from the University of California
at Irvine, and Robert Stephen Mulholland from Canada, described a new
liposuction procedure called SmartLipo— that uses ultrasound to break up
fat cells before removing them surgically.
SmartLipo is performed with local anesthesia and speeds recovery, but
removes far less fat than the more traditional technique. SmartLipo is
controversial. Some physicians say that the procedure is no better than
tried-and-true techniques and that it is little more than a marketing
ploy.
Liposuction is not a painless 'quick fix' for obesity. People are
usually more satisfied with the results of liposuction if they watch
their diet and exercise after the procedure. People who do not change
their lifestyles are usually unhappy with the outcome. Don't have this
surgery unless you understand its risks and are willing to exercise and
watch what you eat! (Aesthetics Plastic Surgery, 33: 687-694, 2009).
EAT RIGHT, TRAIN RIGHT, AND YOU WON'T HAVE TO DO THE ABOVE YOU LAZY PEOPLE.
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