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Most women who get breast implants are satisfied with the results. You are likely to be happy with the results if you have clear, realistic expectations about the surgery and share these with your doctor. Implants will make your breasts larger and perhaps give them a shape you are more pleased with, but no surgeon can guarantee perfection.
Also keep in mind that:
Insurance will not cover the cost of breast implants unless they are being used as part of breast reconstruction after surgery for breast cancer. Likewise, insurance may not cover the costs of treatment for complications that arise during or after surgery or for future surgeries to remove or replace the implants. Check with your insurance company to find out whether getting breast implants will affect how much you pay for your insurance and what you are covered for.
A breast implant can hide abnormal breast tissue or lesions, making detection of abnormal or cancerous breast tissue during mammography more difficult. To produce accurate, high-quality images, the breast has to be squeezed fairly tightly. In rare cases, this causes a breast implant to leak or rupture. Also, scarring and calcium deposits around the implant may look like cancerous tissue and make the mammogram harder to interpret.
If you have breast implants and need to have a mammogram, tell the technician when you schedule the mammogram what type of implants you have (saline or silicone) and whether they are behind or in front of the chest muscle. You may need more views taken than are done during a typical screening. In some cases, MRI scans may be needed to produce a clear image.
The possible connection between silicone gel breast implants and connective tissue disease has been the subject of much research and public debate. But studies have not shown a clear link between implants and connective disease. The use of implants filled with silicone gel has been restricted in parts of Europe and in Canada (and in the United States from 1992 to 2006). This is because of concerns about harm that could come from silicone gel leaking into the body if an implant leaks or ruptures.
In late 2006, the FDA again approved silicone breast implants. This approval was based on studies of women with silicone implants for up to 4 years. Each maker of these implants is now required to study 40,000 women during the first 10 years they have silicone implants. These studies will begin to show how safe silicone implants are over a woman’s lifetime.2
Newer silicone implants contain a gel-like material instead of a liquid. These types of implants do not leak if punctured or cut.
Complete the surgery information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?) to help you prepare for this surgery.
| By: | Healthwise Staff | Last Revised: August 4, 2010 |
| Medical Review: | Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine Keith A. Denkler, MD - Plastic Surgery | |
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