Frequently Asked Questions about Cohesive Silicone Gel Breast Implants / Gummy Bear Breast Implants FAQ
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Breast Implants Cohesive Gel FAQ |
Cohesive Silicone Gel Breast Implants FAQ
(Gummy Bear Breast Implants FAQ)
Information & Photos courtesy of Dr. Teitelbaum of Santa Monica, CA
What Are Cohesive Gel Breast Implants?
The standard implant in the United States has
been saline filled, ever since the FDA
moratorium on silicone gel filled breast
implants in 1992. The type of implants that were
available before the ban are available today as
part of an "adjunct study," which is open to
patients with congenital deformities or having a
revision for particular reasons.
What distinguishes cohesive implants is that the
silicone gel is firmer, essentially a soft
solid. If a cohesive implant is cut in half,
there is no gross movement of gel, and the
implant maintains its shape.
The way these are made is that the company uses
more "crosslinker" in the making of the implant.
The ingredients are the same, but with more
crosslinker added, it makes the gel firmer.
The term "cohesive" has been bastardized in
recent years. Cohesive breast implants implies
form stability, or form retention. That means
that in any position, the implant maintains its
shape. That is an important distinction, because
it means that the shell should not fold, and
that it will maintain a particular shape.
Unfortunately, given the recent media attention
to cohesive implants, many are using the term to
describe "regular" silicone gel implants.
Technically, they are correct; all silicone gel
is cohesive to some degree. But the term
cohesive has always meant form stability, and
when patients ask for cohesive gel, it is
because they are looking for an implant with
those particular characteristics of durability
and shape retention. Hopefully, the terminology
will be clarified in the coming years.
Which Surgeons Can Use Cohesive Gel Implants
In The United States?
Each of the three studies has a group of only
several dozen surgeons that are allowed to order
the implants and implant them. Surgical
expertise and a commitment to careful patient
follow-up were the criteria the manufacturers
used to select the surgeons that they would have
implant their implants. Dr. Teitelbaum is the
only surgeon in California (and if not the only,
one of the very few in the entire nation) to
have been asked by all three manufacturers to
participate in their clinical trials.
Which Patients Can Receive Cohesive Gel
Implants In The United States?
The trials are open to patients seeking a first
time augmentation, a revision of a breast
augmentation, or breast reconstruction following
mastectomy. Patients with certain medical
problems cannot participate. Please see the
enrollment specifications for each of the
implants listed below. In addition to the
objective medical issues, patients must be
committed and willing to participate for a full
ten years of follow-up to be considered for the
study. Patients must be in the immediate
geographic vicinity of the implanting surgeon in
order to facilitate this follow-up.
What Are The Main Advantages Of Cohesive Gel
Implants?
The main advantages of cohesive gel implants are
longevity and shape. Longevity, because they do
not develop folds, and it is along folds that
implants ultimately fail. And if, somehow, the
shell does fail, since the gel is so thick, it
hopefully will not migrate anywhere in any
significant quantity. Shape is enhanced because,
from the point of view of a surgeon, there is
only control of breast shape if there is control
of distribution of fill in an augmentation. If
the fill cannot be controlled, then the shape
cannot be controlled. And to control
distribution of fill in the breast, fill
distribution must be controlled in the breast
implant. All fillers other than cohesive
silicone gel - saline or regular silicone gel
-can migrate around within the shell of an
implant, which means that there is not control
over breast shape. Looking at results from
breast augmentation objectively, these implants
appear to have the most aesthetically natural
and beautiful results.
Why Are Cohesive Gel Implants Anatomically
Shaped?
A breast projects more at the bottom than at the
top. Therefore, it makes sense for an implant to
be shaped that way. And the thinner an implant
is at the top, the more gradually and naturally
it will feather into the upper chest, making
itself less conspicuous. Without a cohesive,
form stable filler, there is little point in
making shape into an implant, as the implant
will ultimately lose the shape. But with a form
stable filler, the shape will be maintained.
Are There Round Cohesive Gel Implants?
Form stable round cohesive gel implants are
available in Europe, but not in the United
States. There is actually very little use for
them. If you look at an implant lying on its
side on a table, it looks much like an M&M. But
when it is held upright, the upper pole
gradually collapses. It is that upper collapse
that allows those implants to look natural
(though it is doing so at the risk of folds on
the implant shell.) A true cohesive round does
not do that. By maintaining that M&M shape when
vertical, it creates a dome-like, relatively
top-protruding shape.
However, cohesivity is not a black and white
issue; there is an endless continuum in cohesive
gel from very liquidy to very solid. On
Silimed's cohesive clinical trial, there are 4
different round gel options. These are more
cohesive than implants made in the past, and can
be considered cohesive, but they are not as
cohesive as their anatomically shaped cohesive
gel implants or the anatomic cohesive implants
by Mentor or Inamed. They fold less than gel
implants of the past, but they are not quite
form stable, in terms of their ability to resist
folds or predictably maintain a shape.
Do Cohesive Gel Implants Come With A Smooth
And A Textured Surface?
All anatomic (a.k.a. teardrop) shaped implants
are textured, as the texturing increases
friction and helps keep them from rotating.
Since a teardrop implant is different at the
bottom than the top, it is important that it
maintains its position.
The Silimed round implants come in both smooth
and textured surface, but remember that while
relatively more cohesive than most other
silicone gel implants, they are not form stable
like their anatomically shaped cousins.
What Happens If A Cohesive Gel Implant
Ruptures?
We do not really know, because there is so
little experience with this. At the time of
writing this, there is report of a single
rupture in a series of several thousand in
Sweden.
If it did happen, however, one would imagine
that the gel, being relatively stiff and solid,
would not migrate in any significant amount.
Since it has the consistency of a gummy bear,
the gel would presumably stay in place.
Microscopic migration of gel would presumably
occur, and this can even happen to some extent
through an intact shell. This is a subject of
ongoing investigation, and more research will be
needed to answer this question.
How Would You Know If A Cohesive Gel Implant
Has Leaked?
Given the gummy bear nature of the filler of
these implants, it is likely that it would be
difficult to tell if they ruptured. Perhaps it
might be detected by mammogram or MRI.
When any implant is placed in the body, the body
forms a capsule around the implant. If a
cohesive implant were to leak, it would probably
just stay within the capsule. The capsule might
thicken, and a patient may notice a difference
in the feel of the breast. But it is also
possible that there might be no change at all.
The important point, however, is that silicone
gel has not been linked with any health problem,
so even if there were a shell disruption, it
should not prove to be of any medical problem.
Related Links
History of Cohesive Silicone Gel Breast Implants
Cohesive Silicone Gel Breast Implants - General Information
McGhan Cohesil Study Information for Cohesive Silicone Gel Breast Implants