Liposuction: A surgical procedure
sculpting the layer of fat under the skin.
Using a tube called a “cannula” inserted through an incision and under the skin with the application of a high vacuum and fat is suctioned out of the area or “aspirated”. Liposuction is not intended as a substitute for normal exercise and a healthy diet, surgical procedure procedure of cosmetic surgery that has associated risks.
One of the primary risks with concern to liposuction is related to anesthesia. The liposuction procedure can be implemented with the use of either general anaesthesia, or local anaesthesia. Using general anaesthesia the patient is completely unconscious, but this is acknowledged to be riskier than local anaesthesia. General anaesthesia can only be delivered by a licensed anesthesiologist, and recovery from the operation is most often more difficult if it is accomplished under general anaesthesia. Local anaesthesia is recognised to be less risky Dr Behnaz, and is the favored method for the liposuction procedure. Local anesthesia is only applied to anesthetize the area that is being worked on, and does not result in the patient becoming unconscious. Convalescence from surgery using a local anaesthetic tends to be much quicker because the patient does not experience the complications of convalescing from general anaesthesia.
Tumescent liposuction is acknowledged to be one of the safest and most effectual approaches used today. Tumescent liposuction employs a solution consisting of a local anaesthetic and epinephrine delivered under the skin in the area that will be worked on. The local anaesthetic desensitizes the spot so the patient does not experience pain from the operation, and the epinephrine induces blood vessels and capillaries in the locality to constrict, which also prevents excessive blood loss. The constricted blood vessels aid to keep the local anaesthetic in the spot of surgery during recovery, so strong narcotic pain relievers are not usually required.
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