Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants

Capsular contracture is the most common major complication after implant-based breast augmentation. The aetiology of capsular contracture is multifactorial. The author reports a retrospective personal series of patients managed over a seven-year period with a nearly unchanged surgical strategy imple...

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Main Author: Brent Tanner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-03-01
Series:JPRAS Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587817300682
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spelling doaj-1fbf57e5469e447383a70f882bad1cfa2020-11-24T21:39:17ZengElsevierJPRAS Open2352-58782018-03-0115C667310.1016/j.jpra.2017.10.007Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implantsBrent TannerCapsular contracture is the most common major complication after implant-based breast augmentation. The aetiology of capsular contracture is multifactorial. The author reports a retrospective personal series of patients managed over a seven-year period with a nearly unchanged surgical strategy implementing most of known measures for capsular contracture prevention. A microtextured silicone gel-filled implant from a single manufacturer was used in all cases. There were 214 consecutive patients (126 primary augmentations and 88 revision augmentations) operated on over the study period. Mean age of the population was 40.0 years, and mean BMI was 22.0 kg/m2. Of the patients in the revision cohort, 44.3% were reoperated on because of previous capsular contracture. Average follow-up was 20.2 months. There was a 0% capsular contracture rate in the primary augmentation cohort and a 3.4% capsular contracture rate in the revision cohort. At last follow-up, 91.2% of breasts received a Baker I grading. Although the follow-up was relatively short, this rate of capsular contracture would still be considered very low. Determining the reason for such a low rate of capsular contracture on Multivariate Analyses would be difficult due to the potential myriad of confounding variables. However, given the constancy of the technique and implant type employed by a single surgeon, the author is of the opinion that the microtexturing topography on the implant surfaceused in this series contributed to the low rate of capsular contracture formation. However, this would need to be tested in arandomized controlled trial comparing microtextured devices with implants that have macrotextured surfaces.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587817300682Breast augmentationBreast implantCapsular contractureTexture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brent Tanner
spellingShingle Brent Tanner
Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
JPRAS Open
Breast augmentation
Breast implant
Capsular contracture
Texture
author_facet Brent Tanner
author_sort Brent Tanner
title Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
title_short Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
title_full Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
title_fullStr Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
title_full_unstemmed Low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
title_sort low rate of capsular contracture in a series of 214 consecutive primary and revision breast augmentations using microtextured implants
publisher Elsevier
series JPRAS Open
issn 2352-5878
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Capsular contracture is the most common major complication after implant-based breast augmentation. The aetiology of capsular contracture is multifactorial. The author reports a retrospective personal series of patients managed over a seven-year period with a nearly unchanged surgical strategy implementing most of known measures for capsular contracture prevention. A microtextured silicone gel-filled implant from a single manufacturer was used in all cases. There were 214 consecutive patients (126 primary augmentations and 88 revision augmentations) operated on over the study period. Mean age of the population was 40.0 years, and mean BMI was 22.0 kg/m2. Of the patients in the revision cohort, 44.3% were reoperated on because of previous capsular contracture. Average follow-up was 20.2 months. There was a 0% capsular contracture rate in the primary augmentation cohort and a 3.4% capsular contracture rate in the revision cohort. At last follow-up, 91.2% of breasts received a Baker I grading. Although the follow-up was relatively short, this rate of capsular contracture would still be considered very low. Determining the reason for such a low rate of capsular contracture on Multivariate Analyses would be difficult due to the potential myriad of confounding variables. However, given the constancy of the technique and implant type employed by a single surgeon, the author is of the opinion that the microtexturing topography on the implant surfaceused in this series contributed to the low rate of capsular contracture formation. However, this would need to be tested in arandomized controlled trial comparing microtextured devices with implants that have macrotextured surfaces.
topic Breast augmentation
Breast implant
Capsular contracture
Texture
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587817300682
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