Facelift in Elk Grove CA
As we become older the gravity, sun exposure and everyday stress leave their marks on our faces. Wrinkles appear between the nose and the mouse, the skin becomes lose and drop below the jaw line and extra fat and skin accumulates around the neck. Facelift cannot stop the aging process but it can "turn back time" by removing extra skin and fat and straitening the muscles.
The ideal candidates for the procedure are patients with skin of the face and neck that started to drop but still has its elasticity.
The operation last from 3-7 hours (it can be longer if additional procedures are done). Some surgeons prefer to work on each side at a time and some do both sides simultaneously. The placement of the cuts and the magnitude of the operation depend on face structure and the correction required. The cut usually starts on the forehead goes in front of the ear and behind the ear lobe, additional cut below the chin is made to repair the neck. The surgeon separates the skin from the fat, removes the extra fat, strengthens the muscles and returns the fat pockets where they use to be. Afterwards he stretches the skin, cuts the extra and closes with sutures. A drainage tube usually left from both sides to draine secretions and blood and the face is bandaged for the first 24 hours.
Every operation has its risks although not common those include, bleeding, infection, damage to facial nerves (usually temporal), face asymmetry and delayed healing. Patients who smoke have higher rates of delayed healing.
There may be pain or uncomfortable felling after the recovery that can be treated with painkillers. A sensation of ants crawling usually disappears after weeks or a month after the surgery. Bandages are removed after a day or two and your face may look swollen. Red or pale with bleeding spots, you must remember that those will disappear after few days or weeks.
You can get out of bed after 24 hours but you should avoid any efforts for at least a week to help the healing process. You should avoid alcohol, hot tubs and saunas for at least a month. Most of the patients feel disappointed at first, their face look and feel strange but after a few weeks the scars will heal and you'll be able to see the final results. Many patients return to work after 3 weeks. Sometimes you may need to use make up to blur the hemorrhage spots.
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Plastic Surgery News...
- BBC news reports that the manufacturers of Gaviscon (Reckitt Benkiser) maintained an effective monopoly on the market for years after Gaviscon came off patent. An investigation for the BBC’s Newsnight programme has found that executives at the company prevented other manufacturers from selling generic versions of Gaviscon by creating obstacles. According to BBC news, a generic name should have been published in 2000, the company objected to this and did so again in 2003, 2005 and 2006. In each case it quoted health and patient safety as the reason for its objections but internal documents accessed by BBC Newsnight give a different story. A former senior executive said Reckitt had "cheated the NHS" and could have saved it "millions of pounds". A competition lawyer has told the programme that some of the emails and business plans he had examined raised the question of whether Reckitt had been in breach of competition law. The BBC news report notes, “Nine years after its patent elapsed, Gaviscon still has 88% of the market for alginic acid compounds in the National Health Service and there is still no generic name. Generic copies of Gaviscon could have saved around £40m from the drugs budget since 1999.” The report also adds that Parliament's health select committee is expected to investigate the Gaviscon case. The company has told Newsnight that it had never objected to a generic name being published, "the timetable of which is not within our control". The company did say that it would be taking action in relation to some of the internal correspondence from 2003, discovered by the Newsnight investigation.
The Newsnight programme will be broadcast at 10.30pm on Friday 7th March on BBC Two.
- The PSNC, jointly with the National Pharmacy Association, Company Chemists’ Association and Association of Independent Multiple pharmacies, has submitted its response to the Department of Health’s consultation on the proposed Responsible Pharmacist regulations.
The major change proposed in the consultation is the replacement of the current requirements of the Medicines Act 1968 for every pharmacy to have a pharmacist in 'personal control' of the premises, with the concept of a 'responsible pharmacist'. To view the comments and suggestions made in the response, please see the link above.