Ebody.com
Ebody.com
---- Home
Plastic Surgery
Home > Plastic Surgery > Tummy Tuck
Topics
BOTOX Injections
Breast Augmentation
Breast Lift
Breast Reduction
Calf Implants
Cellulite Treatment
Chemical Peel
Collagen Treatment
Dermabrasion
Ear Surgery
Eyelid Surgery
Facelift Surgery
Facial Implants
Fat Injections
Forehead Lift (Browlift)
Hair Restoration
Laser Resurfacing
Lip Augmentation
Liposuction
Male Breast Reduction
Nasal Surgery
Neck Lift
Pectoral Implants
Permanent Makeup
Scar Revision
Tattoo Removal
Thigh, Butt and Arm Lifts
Tummy Tuck
Vein Treatment
 
Tummy Tuck
  • Introduction
  • What You Need to Know
  • Related Articles
  • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    INTRODUCTION
    You cut your calorie and fat intake and practically live at the gym. But despite doing hundreds, if not thousands, of abdominal exercises every week, you can not control your protruding belly. Your midsection is a blight on your otherwise trim figure, and it bothers you to no end.

    You may be a candidate for an abdominoplasty, or "tummy tuck". For a growing number of Americans, this surgical procedure which offers to tighten and thin the stomach may be worth the risks, discomfort, time off from work and associated scarring.

    According to the most recent data available from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, the number of tummy tucks performed annually in the United States rose 36 percent between 1996 to 1998, to 46,597 procedures.

    Once healed from surgery, your tummy will be flat and tight. You may lose up to several inches from your waistline and your clothes will often fit better. You may also be a few pounds lighter, depending on how much skin and fat were removed.

    Any stretch marks and old scars that you had below the level of your belly button may be gone after the operation.

    The aesthetic results of your operation should be permanent, as long as you avoid gaining weight and pregnancy. Weight gain or pregnancy will cause your abdomen to protrude again, but to a lesser extent than before your tummy tuck.


    More Information About This Procedure

  • What You Need to Know
  • Related Articles


  • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

  • About the Procedure
  • Incisions
  • Who Is a Candidate?
  • The Mini-Tummy Tuck
  • Pain
  • Recovery
  • Scarring
  • Risks
  • Costs
  • More to Know

    Top of Page



  • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    RELATED ARTICLES
  • Myth Busting / Plastic Surgery

    Top of Page