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Volume 7, Issue 3 (Suppl)

Otolaryngol (Sunnyvale), an open access journal

ISSN:2161-119X

Head, Neck and Plastic Surgery 2017

June 19-20, 2017

Page 31

Notes:

conference

series

.com

June 19-20, 2017 Philadelphia, USA

5

th

Global Summit and Expo on

Head, Neck and Plastic Surgery

Yehuda Ullmann, Otolaryngol (Sunnyvale) 2017, 7:3 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-119X-C1-015

Applying the Lejour technique for augmentation mastopexy

Background & Aim:

Doubts are commonly cast over the safety of the single-stage augmentation mastopexy procedure.

Currently, the literature is sparse. Applying the Lejour technique for augmentation mastopexy has provided excellent aesthetic

results and significantly reduced complications. Hereby presented is this easy to learn reproducible technique, allowing one

to perform both procedures together safely. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first description written in the English

literature.

Methods:

Over a six-year period, 53 women underwent simultaneous augmentation mastopexy using this approach. Implants

(size 200-300 cc, textured, Mentor®) were all placed in the subglandular plane. All procedures were performed under deep

sedation, peri-operative antibiotics were administered and patients were discharged after less than 24 hours. Complications

were recorded. The patient follow-up period ranged from six months to seven years.

Results:

Symmetric, aesthetic results were achieved in all patients. Only three patients (5.66%) had recurrence of breast ptosis.

Two patients suffered from dehiscence of the surgical wounds, of which one required secondary suturing (1.89%). This is a

much lower percentage than the 10.65% reoperation rate noted in the literature. There were no incidences of hypertrophic

scarring, capsular contraction, tissue related asymmetry, hematoma, infection, fat necrosis, necrosis or loss of the nipple-

areolar complex (NAC) and no NAC loss of sensation.

Conclusion:

This presentation suggests that with careful patient selection pooled complications and reoperation rates for

single-stage augmentation-mastopexy using the Lejour technique are acceptably low. The three-layer coverage of the prosthesis

prevents it from downward shifting and from exposure, along with preserving the longevity of the results.

Biography

Yehuda Ullmann is the Head of the Plastic Surgery Department and Aesthetic Services at Rambam Health Care Campus in Haifa, Israel. In addition, he is an

Associate Clinical Professor of Plastic Surgery at the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. His research interests include in-

creasing viability of autologous fat transplants and reconstructive and aesthetic surgery and he has published over 120 articles in peer-reviewed journals. He is also

an internationally acknowledged expert in the use of laser and IPL technologies. Until recently, he served as the President of the Israel Society of Plastic Surgery.

y_ullmann@rambam.health.gov.il

Yehuda Ullmann

Rambam Health Care Campus, Israel