November 30th, 2011 by John Di Saia, M.D. in Health Tips, Opinion
Tags: Belly Button, Childbirth, Cosmetic Surgery, Loose, Loose Skin, Plastic Surgery, Pregnancy, Repair, Scar, Scarring, Stretch, Tummy Tuck, umbilicoplasty
No Comments »
Question:
When I was pregnant, my daughter pushed against my belly button the last couple of months and stretched it out. Then I ended up having two hernias which also stretched it out. Unfortunately I pierced my belly button when I was 15 and the skin above my belly button is now extremely loose. Can you fix this?
I am 26 and had my baby in Sept of 2010. I gained 30 pounds (healthy) and immediately had the two hernias. I think they were a result of the pregnancy or labor. I had them repaired in Jan of 2011. I am planning on having one more child. If it’s not a boy, then we’ll be having another one. Lastly, no I am not a fitness model. I’d like to be!
Belly button plastic surgery is usually referred to as umbilicoplasty. It is a routine part of tummy tuck operations as it becomes necessary when moving the position of the umbilical opening. As you have discovered,
Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Truth in Cosmetic Surgery*
November 27th, 2011 by HarvardHealth in Health Tips, Research
Tags: Annals Of Internal Medicine, Bone loss, Elderly, Exercise, Jogging, Old Age, Osteoporosis, Physical Activity, postmenopausal, Research, Resistance, smoking, Study, Vitamin D, Weights, whole-body vibration
No Comments »
Good vibrations may work for dancing on the beach or for romance, but they don’t seem to do much to strengthen bones.
Results of a clinical trial published in the Annals of Internal Medicine showed that older women who stood on a vibrating platform for 20 minutes a day experienced just as much bone loss over the course of the year-long trial as women who didn’t use the platform.
The results are a disappointment for older women and men looking to strengthen their bones without exercising, not to mention to the companies that have sprung up to sell whole-body vibration platforms as an easy way to halt osteoporosis, the age-related loss of bone.
The idea behind whole-body vibration makes sense. Like walking, running, and other weight-bearing physical activities, whole-body vibration Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Harvard Health Blog*
November 26th, 2011 by Linda Burke-Galloway, M.D. in Health Tips, True Stories
Tags: Baby, Birth, Conduction Type Loss, CTL, Deaf, Dr. Linda Burke-Galloway, Hearing, Heather Simonsen, Labor, Loss, Middle Ear, National Institute of Health, NIH, Otosclerosis, Pregnancy, Ringing Ears, Surgery, symptoms
No Comments »
Can you imagine giving birth and then immediately discovering that you couldn’t hear anyone? That you were completely deaf? That’s exactly what happened to Heather Simonsen, a mother of three who lives in Utah. Simonsen noticed after each previous pregnancy that sounds would come and go and her ears felt clogged. She saw an ear, nose and throat specialist who advised her that she was gradually losing her hearing in the left ear. She also began to hear a ringing in her ear.
Simonsen didn’t realize that she was developing a condition called Otosclerosis, a disease of the bones of the middle ear. The bones of the middle ear (the maleus, incus and stapes) are usually flexible and transmit sound but with Otosclerosis, this is not possible because the bones become fused together. Simonsen is one of the Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Dr. Linda Burke-Galloway*
November 25th, 2011 by ChristopherChangMD in Health Tips
Tags: Allergies, Deviated Septum, Intermittent, Mucosal Swelling, Nasal Cavities, Nasal Congestion, Nose, Obstruction, Swelling, symptoms, turbinate hypertrophy, Upper Respiratory Infection
No Comments »
A deviated septum is a well known factor causing nasal obstruction in people. However, many patients with a deviated septum will also state that there are times when they can breathe just fine from their nose. As such, can a deviated septum truly be the cause of their nasal obstructive symptoms? Shouldn’t the obstruction be constant?
The blunt answer is ABSOLUTELY nasal obstruction can be intermittent OR constant with a deviated septum!!! It’s more a question of degree.
To begin with, a deviated septum is when the wall that separates the right and left nasal cavities is bent one way (green arrow in left illustration) instead of being perfectly straight (right illustration).
If there is no mucosal swelling, a person with a deviated septum is able to breathe from both sides just fine. However, if there is the slightest bit of mucosal swelling from turbinate hypertrophy, allergies, upper respiratory infection, or any other environmental irritation, the side that is more narrow will obstruct much more readily with less swelling given there is just “less room” for swelling to occur before obstruction occurs.
Below is the same exact nose and septum as above, but with mucosal swelling present. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Fauquier ENT Blog*
November 23rd, 2011 by John Di Saia, M.D. in Health Tips
Tags: Breakthrough, Cosmetic Surgery, Disposable, Fluid, local anesthetic, Numbing, Pain, Pain Pump, Plastic Surgery, Risks, Seroma, Surgeon, Tummy Tuck, Wound
No Comments »
About ten years ago plastic surgery had a nice little advance- the advent of the disposable pain pump. Breakthroughs in medicine are far fewer than advertising copy would have you believe, but this one is real. Unfortunately some practices use them like a marketing ploy in all cases and really don’t spend the time to make them work well or minimize their risk. Others don’t see the benefit and don’t use them at all.
Pain pumps are quite useful in some cases when used correctly. Plastic surgery is a technical specialty and some surgeons are more adept at making things work than others. There are risks with them and cases in which the benefit is harder to measure.
How Does a Pain Pump Work? Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Truth in Cosmetic Surgery*