How to Select
Your Botox Doctor?
by Peter Lenkefi
Credentials: Selected surgeons
should be certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS).
Any doctor (even one from a nonsurgical specialty) can legally
perform surgery.
On the other hand, certification by the ABPS ensures at least
five years of surgical training, including two years of training
specifically in plastic surgery.
Patients undergoing a cosmetic procedure should select a member
of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS)
to help ensure that their surgeon has extensive cosmetic surgical
experience and has met ASAPS requirements for continuing cosmetic
surgery education.
Hospital privileges: Cosmetic plastic surgery is often performed
outside the hospital in an office-based surgical facility. Wherever
the surgery is to be performed, selected surgeons should have
hospital privileges to perform the specific procedure in an acute
care hospital.
Facilities: Published data show that accredited office-based facilities
have a safety record comparable to that of hospital ambulatory
surgery settings.
Ambulatory or office-based facilities should be accredited by
a nationally or state-recognized accrediting agency, or be state
licensed or Medicare certified.
Health: Candidates for cosmetic surgery should be in generally
good physical health and must be candid with their physician about
any drugs they are taking.
The medical history should include hormones (oral contraceptives
and estrogen replacement) and even aspirin, vitamins, and herbal
medications since these substances can interfere with blood clotting
or interact with medications used during surgery and could increase
surgical risk.
Patient education: Before surgery, patients should be educated
about all aspects of the planned surgery, including whether to
discontinue certain medications and stop smoking. Postoperative
care should be thoroughly discussed with the surgeon, as surgery
is not truly over until the patient is ambulatory and has returned
to a relatively normal routine.
Risks: Most cosmetic surgery is extremely safe in the hands of
surgeons certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery. However,
even with the highest level of care, every surgery carries risks
as well as benefits, and these should be discussed thoroughly
before surgery is undertaken.
For example, multiple procedures performed at the same time may
increase the risks of surgery. There are risks associated with
anesthesia, analgesics and antibiotics. Smokers are at greater
risk of complications including delayed wound healing, skin loss,
scarring, and poor surgical outcome.
Other risks include deep vein thrombosis (DVT) [formulation of
blood clots in the veins] and pulmonary embolism (PE) [a blood
clot that goes to the lungs preventing the lungs from exchanging
air].
Factors such as general anesthesia and prolonged operating time
appear to increase the risk of DVT. Both DVT and PE are unpredictable
and can occur outside the surgical setting, as the result of certain
medical conditions or from immobilization; for example, individuals
have developed DVT following long airplane trips.
Postoperative monitoring and home care: In the immediate postoperative
period, any patient undergoing cosmetic surgery should be monitored
by qualified medical personnel and discharged from the surgical
facility only after evaluation by the surgeon.
Usually, cosmetic surgery is performed as an outpatient procedure;
occasionally, the surgeon may recommend an overnight stay. Patients
should arrange to have someone available for assistance for the
first day or two following surgery.
About the author:
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please visit http://www.botox-cosmetic-doctor.com