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washingtonpost.com: For More Teenage Girls, Adult Plastic Surgery

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<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>: <strong>For</strong> <strong>More</strong> <strong>Teenage</strong> <strong>Girls</strong>, <strong>Adult</strong> <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>1/4/08 11:08 PM<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong><strong>For</strong> <strong>More</strong> <strong>Teenage</strong> <strong>Girls</strong>, <strong>Adult</strong> <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>Rise in Breast Implants, Other Procedures Raises Doubts About Long-TermEffectsBy Sandra G. BoodmanWashington Post Staff WriterTuesday, October 26, 2004; Page A01Nicole Casto was unhappy with the way she looked and determined to dosomething about it. A year of breast-feeding had taken a toll, she said, so after hertax refund check arrived in June, the 19-year-old single mother underwent breastimplant surgery performed by plastic surgeon Barry J. Cohen in his Rockvilleoffice."My family was upset that I was so young," said Casto, who lives in Woodstock,Va., and works as a waitress. "But I explained to them that it was about beingconfident," said Casto, who said she is "very pleased" with the surgery.<strong>For</strong> decades, plastic surgery for teenage girls meant one thing -- a nose job,frequently performed during the summer between high school and college. Whilerhinoplasty remains the most <strong>com</strong>mon cosmetic operation for teenagers, doctorsare performing an increasing number of procedures such as breast implants,liposuction and tummy tucks on young women like Casto and even girls as youngas 14.The enormous popularity of reality TV shows such as "Extreme Makeover," "TheSwan" and MTV's "I Want a Famous Face," as well as an explosion of Web sitesthat extol the virtues of cosmetic medicine, has fueled the desire of adolescent girlsto alter their bodies permanently, and they are finding more surgeons willing tooblige them. Breast implants and liposuction are now bestowed by parents asgraduation or birthday gifts. Some doctors say they have performed breastaugmentations on baby-boomer mothers and their teenage daughters.Critics say that teenage girls, who tend to be both obsessed and dissatisfied withtheir looks, are too young and shortsighted to understand the implications ofsurgery, particularly the risks that implants may pose and the long-termmaintenance they require. Among them are the possibility of rupture or permanentscarring, the need for periodic operations to replace or remove the devices, potential interference withbreast-feeding and mammography, and unresolved questions about their long-term safety."Having cleavage may be the most important thing when you're 18, but it's not when you're 25," said DianaZuckerman, president of the National Research Center for Women and Families, a nonprofit Washingtonthink tank.A Recent BoomIn the past few months, several physicians groups have warned teenagers and their parents against resortingto major surgery as a quick fix for popularity or self-esteem.From 2002 to 2003, according to the American Society for Aesthetic <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>, the number of girls 18and younger who got breast implants nearly tripled, from 3,872 to 11,326. Among all age groups, cosmetichttp://www.<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>/ac2/wp-dyn/A62540-2004Oct25?language=printerPage 1 of 4


<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>: <strong>For</strong> <strong>More</strong> <strong>Teenage</strong> <strong>Girls</strong>, <strong>Adult</strong> <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>1/4/08 11:08 PMimplants have skyrocketed in popularity, according to the American Society of <strong>Plastic</strong> Surgeons. Last year,according to the ASPS, about 247,000 women got implants for augmentation, <strong>com</strong>pared with 32,000 in1992.Although cosmetic surgery remains most popular in other cities -- especially Miami, Dallas, Los Angelesand New York -- eight plastic surgeons who practice in the medically conservative Washington area saythey are seeing more teenagers than ever."I've seen a huge rise in the number of girls" seeking implants, said McLean plastic surgeon Csaba L.Magassy, who has been in practice for 30 years. In the past year, Magassy estimates, he has given breastimplants to about 25 teenagers, most of them 18 or 19, a fourfold increase over a few years ago.Despite the growing popularity of implants, most teenagers who undergo the surgery are reluctant to talkabout a procedure that is easily stigmatized as self-indulgent. A few teenagers who have talked about theirdecision to get implants have received wide attention.Several teenage girls who had cosmetic surgery in the past year requested that their names be withheld fromthis story. One of Magassy's recent patients, a 19-year-old student at Salisbury University in Maryland, saidshe had been seriously considering implants since she was 15. Unhappy with her 34A bra size, she said shedid not like the way her clothes fit."My mother and I talked about it, I had money saved, and I just wanted to do it," said the student, whosefamily lives near Annapolis. She said her parents paid part of the $6,700 fee as a reward because shereceived college scholarships. "I'm just a lot happier" wearing a 36C bra, she added. "I think a lot of girlsthink about plastic surgery."Some of Magassy's patients undergo multiple operations, acquiring smaller noses and bigger breasts at thesame time. "That's a popular <strong>com</strong>bination," he said. Stephen Greenberg, a New York surgeon, said that ofthe 100 teenage girls to whom he has given implants in the past year, about 20 had an ac<strong>com</strong>panying tummytuck or liposuction.To Cohen, Casto's surgeon, the dramatic increase in adolescent patients reflects cultural changes that havenormalized plastic surgery."There's a generational difference," said Cohen, who estimates he has performed breast augmentations on 20older teenagers. <strong>Teenage</strong>rs, he said, tend to be more open about, and accepting of, cosmetic procedures thantheir parents are.Other procedures that have be<strong>com</strong>e more popular among teenagers are liposuction and chin implants, whichare sometimes performed at the same time as nose jobs. Although some surgeons say they performliposuction on girls who have lost a lot of weight, others, including Magassy, are reluctant. "They think it's aquick fix and then they're back where they started within a year," he said.Questions of MaturityAlthough there is no prohibition against performing implant surgery on patients younger than 18, somesurgeons say they are reluctant to do so in part because girls may still be growing. Sometimes doctors willperform the surgery in cases where one breast is markedly larger than the other or in an older teenager whohas no breast development."At 18, girls really don't know what they're doing," said Scott L. Spear, president of the ASPS and the chiefof plastic surgery at Georgetown University Hospital. Many do not "realize it's more than just having yourhttp://www.<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>/ac2/wp-dyn/A62540-2004Oct25?language=printerPage 2 of 4


<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>: <strong>For</strong> <strong>More</strong> <strong>Teenage</strong> <strong>Girls</strong>, <strong>Adult</strong> <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>1/4/08 11:08 PMears pierced."Surgeons say they make decisions about whether to operate on an individual basis and try to ensure thatteenagers, like their adult counterparts, are appropriate candidates who have realistic expectations. Thatmeans weeding out a girl who wants surgery to please someone else, who is counting on surgery to changeher life, or who has a deep-seated psychological problem, such as an eating disorder. Surgeons say theytend to subject adults to similar but less intense scrutiny, assuming they are independent and less naive.Greenberg said he tries to assess how mature teenagers are. He said he turns away those whom he considerstoo young or those "who say 'I want to look like Britney Spears' or 'I want to be a D cup so I can go outwith more boys.' "Zuckerman said she believes many surgeons tend to gloss over the risks -- which most teenagers do notwant to hear about anyway. "Some teenagers sound mature when they're not," she said, "or know the rightthings to say. You basically have a young girl being reassured by her doctor."Many doctors say they are reassured when a teenager is ac<strong>com</strong>panied by her mother because it allows themto assess the degree of parental support -- or opposition. Frequently, surgeons say, parents seem unenthusedbut resigned. "In some ways, it's no different than any other entitlement," said Spear, the father of a teenagedaughter and two college-age sons.Crystal Mast said she told her mother, a nurse, that she was "determined" to get implants after she graduatedfrom high school in June. Mast, 18, who lives in East Islip, N.Y., said she decided the surgery was safe aftersearching the Internet and booked a consultation with Greenberg, who had been re<strong>com</strong>mended by customersat the Victoria's Secret lingerie store where she worked. After ac<strong>com</strong>panying her to the appointment, Mastsaid, her mother agreed to loan her about half of the nearly $7,000 surgical fee as a graduation present.Now that surgery has increased her breast size from an A to a C cup, Mast said, she no longer feels selfconsciousabout how her clothes fit or in <strong>com</strong>parison to her more developed younger sister.Medical IssuesMaturity is only part of the equation, experts say, because of persistent, unresolved questions about thelong-term effect of breast implants. In the past 15 years, the devices have been the subject of furiouscontroversy over their safety, mostly involving silicone-gel-filled implants. The Food and DrugAdministration has banned the widespread use of silicone-gel implants because of unanswered questionsabout their safety, but permits the use of saline-filled implants, which have a silicone shell. Both types arethe subject of ongoing FDA studies.Three years ago as a 19-year-old student at Baylor University in Texas, Kacey Long got implants becauseshe wanted to look like Julia Roberts playing Erin Brockovich in the hit movie. Many of her classmates,Long said, had received implants as high school graduation presents.Her parents strenuously opposed surgery, but Long told them she was going to have it done anyway. Hersurgeon agreed to take half his $4,500 fee in installments, and a friend's mother, who worked for the doctor,reassured her that none of his patients had ever <strong>com</strong>plained of problems.Her D-cup implants were so big, she recalled, that she "looked like a porn star."A few weeks after her surgery, Long said, she began experiencing shooting pain in her arms, followed byintense joint pain and crushing fatigue. She had trouble getting out of bed and spent months consultingdoctors who told her they did not know what was wrong.http://www.<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>/ac2/wp-dyn/A62540-2004Oct25?language=printerPage 3 of 4


<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>: <strong>For</strong> <strong>More</strong> <strong>Teenage</strong> <strong>Girls</strong>, <strong>Adult</strong> <strong>Plastic</strong> <strong>Surgery</strong>1/4/08 11:08 PMLast year a specialist in Dallas told her she had rheumatoid arthritis, suggested her implants might beresponsible and re<strong>com</strong>mended their removal. Her parents took out a $6,400 loan to pay for removal surgery.Since then, Long said, her health has improved.Although many women continue to believe their implants made them sick, no scientific link has beenconclusively established with autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, according to the FDA.But the agency warns in a 2004 handbook for patients that "most women with breast implants willexperience local <strong>com</strong>plications" including pain, hardening and rupture. Recipients "should be prepared forlong-term follow up, reoperations to treat <strong>com</strong>plications and personal financial costs." Less <strong>com</strong>mon<strong>com</strong>plications include numbness, infection and blood clots.A 1999 report by the Institute of Medicine found that implants can interfere with breast-feeding, as well asmammography, by obscuring part of the breast, potentially resulting in delayed cancer diagnoses.Mammograms also can rupture implants, requiring their removal.The FDA Web site features graphic photos of <strong>com</strong>plications and notes that 45,000 augmentation patientshad their implants removed last year. Removal, the FDA warns, could result in "undesirable cosmeticchanges" such as permanently wrinkled, dimpled or puckered skin.Magassy said that most teenagers who consult him are "so frightened" that they do not ask any questions.During the initial appointment, he said, he outlines the risks and assures patients that implants "are a verysimple procedure and if you don't like it, you can take it out."Psychologist Ann Kearney-Cooke, a visiting scholar at Columbia University who studies girls and bodyimage, said the increase in cosmetic surgery among adolescents reflects a pernicious trend that pervadespopular culture: the glorification of rail-thin, large-breasted women. It is, she notes, an unnatural body typerarely achievable without surgery."Kids spend a lot of time in chat rooms and they're bombarded by the media with these unrealistic images,"Kearney-Cooke said. "When you're a teenage girl, there's this whole myth of transformation that's verypowerful: namely that cosmetic surgery can transform your looks and your life."It's as though the question 'Who am I?' has been replaced with 'What image do I want to project?' "© 2004 The Washington Post Companyhttp://www.<strong>washingtonpost</strong>.<strong>com</strong>/ac2/wp-dyn/A62540-2004Oct25?language=printerPage 4 of 4

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