Should high BMI of transmasculine patients prevent them from masculinizing their chest walls?

Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery(2023)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Dear Editor, Chest wall masculinization is one of the familiar procedures used to serve the transition from female to male (FtM). Transmasculine patients typically have excess skin thickness, larger breast volumes, and presence of chest ptosis.[1] Patients with high BMI have heavier and large breasts, making them more difficult to survive as a man. Many of these people have used breast binding to hide their breasts. Nevertheless, this can escalate the skin elasticity, necessitating excess skin excision during future chest masculinization. Because a large fraction of FtM individuals is obese, the early surgical access during their transition of gender affirmation can help with satisfaction and cosmesis. High body mass index (BMI) is regarded as a connection to the poor outcomes following the chest masculinization surgery.[2] In spite, there is no proper evidence to support, people with a BMI greater than 30 kg/m2 have been denied this surgical procedure historically. When compared to other weight classifications, patients with a higher BMI had a higher incidence of wound dehiscence. The known relation between chest scarring and larger breast size is understandably the most concerning aspect of the chest masculinization among the obese individuals.[3] Access to proper medical care for transgender people must be greatly simplified and the weight need not be a barrier for having the surgical approach to chest masculinization. Mastectomy could be performed securely in obese FtM patients for chest wall masculinization, while the interconnection between breast volume and obesity raises concerns about increased scarring and poor esthetic outcomes making the rates of acute or sudden complications comparable [Figure 1].[2,4,5] The “hockey stick” incision comprising of free nipple grafts (FNGs) may dampen gender dysphoria in transgender men by reconstructing a cis-masculine appearing chest. “Hockey stick” incision is made up of two incisions horizontally, one at the infra-mamillary fold (horizontalized medially) and one at the overlapping of the horizontal incision line superiorly above the upper limit of the nipple-areolar complex. Findings of a study by Junn et al. indicated that this approach is an effective and safe technique for chest masculinization, specifically in patients with ptotic and moderate to large breast tissue and high BMI who achieve gender congruence with cis-masculine models. Furthermore, the “hockey stick” technique provides comparable better clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction to types of peri-areolar incision and FNGs.[6]Figure 1:: Showing mastectomy of an obese FtM transgender patient performed with a transverse incision and free nipple-areolar complex grafts: (A) preoperative planning and (B) postoperative resultFinancial support and sponsorship Nil. Conflicts of interest There are no conflicts of interest. Ethical approval Not required.
更多
查看译文
关键词
transmasculine patients,chest walls,high bmi
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要