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New, bigger breasts -- naturally


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#1 kevin

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Posted 12 November 2003 - 04:17 PM


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Link: http://www.canada.co...31-A99EFBF6D854
Date: 11-11-03
Author: Sharon Kirkey
Source:http://www.canada.com
Title: .New, bigger breasts -- naturally
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New, bigger breasts -- naturally
Sharon Kirkey
CanWest News Service

Scientists are working on a new technique that may allow women to grow natural, new breasts, starting with injectable implants.

The concept involves using a woman's own normal, healthy fat cells and growing them in a lab dish on a scaffold of tiny, degradable beads.

The cells and scaffolding would then be mixed with a thin gel, and injected through a syringe into the patient's chest.

The scaffolding would later break down and leave the body through the kidneys. The transplanted cells, meanwhile, would replicate and form new tissue.

The technique is being developed to help reduce the emotional trauma and scarring of breast cancer surgery.

But, some companies are already eyeing it with something entirely different in mind: The first biologically-based implants for women who want larger breasts.

If it works, it could give new meaning to that old question, "Are they real?"

The injectable implants could avoid risks associated with other breast-implant operations, such as infection, bleeding and blood clots. In theory, there would also be no risk of rejection, "because the woman's own cells are used," says lead scientist Karen Burg, a professor of bioengineering at Clemson University in South Carolina.

The injectable implants would also form to any size or irregular shape to fill an area damaged by breast cancer surgery. The transplanted cells would stop growing once they became densely packed. "When they sense they have neighbours, they stop growing."

The biodegradable materials would be broken down into small, dissolvable units and removed in urine. "Most of the materials that we are focusing on break down into products already found in the body, such as lactic acid or collagen, for example, or that are used in the food industry," Burg says.

She says much of the groundwork has been done. "Once a company picks it up, they're on the fast track."

If the biological implants eventually reach the market, it would be a new option for women seeking implants.

"They wouldn't have to have something synthetic (in their body) that would always be a continual worry to them."

More women than ever are seeking breast implants, with some even taking out bank loans and forgoing home renovations in pursuit of a bigger bust, according to a British poll reported last week.

In Canada, demand is growing just as a new study suggests many women end up having their implants permanently removed because of complications, and as Canadian and U.S. officials consider easing restrictions on a controversial silicone breast implant that was pulled from the open market 11 years ago.

Two weeks ago, researchers with the British Columbia Centre of Excellence for Women's Health reported women who undergo breast implant surgery visit the doctor more often, see specialists more often and are hospitalized more frequently than women without implants. Forty per cent of the 92 women who responded to a follow-up questionnaire had their implants taken out. Most of the women in the study had silicone-gel filled implants.

Some critics are extremely dismissive of the research. Dr. Claudio De Lorenzi, a plastic surgeon in Kitchener, Ont., says the results were clearly biased, because the women in the study who had breast implants were partly recruited through public service announcements in community newspapers.

"Women with breast implant problems would be more likely to participate," argues the past president of the Canadian Society for Aesthetic (Cosmetic) Plastic Surgery.

He and other surgeons say the number of women who reported having their implants permanently removed does not fit with what they see in their own practices.

"I've done over a thousand breast implants (using saline implants) and 170 of the (silicone) gel. I should have pulled out 400 sets of implants. That's just not true," De Lorenzi says. "I may have pulled out two dozen or so, but I haven't pulled out hundreds."

One week later, the chair of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory panel that narrowly voted in favour of lifting a ban on silicone gel-filled implants urged the FDA to ignore his panel's "misguided" ruling and reject Inamed Corp.'s application to resume marketing silicone implants. (Inamed is also seeking Health Canada approval to make the implants widely available in Canada.)

Dr. Thomas Whalen argued in a letter to the FDA that the long-term safety "was clearly not demonstrated", the Associated Press reported.

Whalen's panel met just as U.S. and Finnish researchers reported the results of a study that found a three times higher than expected rate of suicide among women who had breast implants. Researchers tracked almost 2,200 women who underwent cosmetic breast implantation in Finland from 1970 to 2000.

Overall death rates were actually slightly lower than expected. But the suicide rate was statistically significantly higher than expected, and was highest during the first five years of follow-up.

Mental health experts were quick to caution that any psychological problems were likely to have existed before the surgery.

Dr. David Sarwer, of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine's Center for Human Appearance in Philadelphia, told a gathering of science reporters that up to 15 per cent of women who have plastic surgery suffer from body dysmorphic disorder, a preoccupation with imagined or slight flaws in appearance. Sarwer says surgeons need to improve screening of at-risk women.

An estimated 100,000 to 200,000 women in Canada have breast implants, about 80 per cent for cosmetic augmentation.




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