Breast reductions will increase in 2024 as ‘breast job regret’ rises, a leading plastic surgeon has warned.
Removals of breast implants, also known as explants, have increased more than sixfold in the past decade in Australia, recent Medicare figures have revealed.
Now the once-rare procedure is growing so fast in demand that it is set to be one of the most popular surgeries of 2024, said Marc Pacifico, president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons.
Mr Pacifico said customers, who are mostly women, now prefer “shape over size” – but there is a good reason for this change in direction.
The huge increase is believed to have inspired Kylie Jenner, who spoke of her regrets about getting breast implants last year, saying she wished she had “never done them”. The NY Post References.
However, the increase in cases of breast implant disease (BII) could also be a contributing factor.
The term is used by women who have self-identified breast implants and describe a variety of symptoms from chronic fatigue, pain and brain fog to the development of autoimmune diseases.
BII is not currently recognized as an official medical diagnosis, but is increasingly being recognized.
In recent months there have been a number of famous faces including Tori Spelling, Blac Chyna and Chrissy Teigen who have had their implants removed.
But it’s not just celebrities who are following a bigger aesthetic flip trend with dozens of women following the biggest aesthetic flip trend.
“When I got my boobs done, the beauty trend was to have the Kardashian look – big boobs and a big butt,” influencer Alyssa McKay told the publication.
“I wish I had waited and thought about whether surgery was something I really wanted to do.
“Or if I just thought I needed a certain look.”
Mr Pacifico believes the trend will continue to soar in 2024, with major complaints among the gentry being pain with heavy implants or breast reconstruction after having children.
“Post-pregnancy patients who would like their breasts to be restored to the way they were before breastfeeding and before losing the breast volume and not this Island of Love press,” he said The Daily Mail.
Sydney plastic and reconstructive surgeon Anand Deva echoed this sentiment in an interview with 9 News Recently, evidence shows the beginning of a trend towards women becoming more aware of the health risks of breast implants.
“Breast augmentation still remains the number one cosmetic procedure performed worldwide, but – for the first time – we’ve seen a decline in it and a comparative increase in the number of implants,” Professor Deva said.
She also said the power of social media was a “game changer”, allowing women to communicate and share “real” experiences with breast surgery for the first time.
Professor Deva is currently leading Australia’s first study into the symptoms of women who think they have BII.
The study by Sydney’s Macquarie University tracked the symptoms of 200 women before and after the operation.
Preliminary findings from the study, based on 45 women six months after surgery, found that in 70 to 80 percent of them many symptoms lessened or disappeared completely after their implants were removed.
Mr Pacifico also expects a rise in combined facelifts and neck lifts, after eagle-eyed social media users dismissed those who had the former because of the lack of taut skin around the décolleté.
“Without a good, harmonious improvement to someone’s neck, a facelift doesn’t look as good as it could or as natural as it could,” Mr. Pacifico said.
“If you don’t have a good neck and you have a good face, we can spot immediately that something is wrong.”
In an ideal world, cosmetic surgery should not be noticeable with the patient looking “very natural, very fresh” after it has been carried out, he said.