Autologous Fat Transfer
Cross-source consensus on Autologous Fat Transfer from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Preparation
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Transferred fat should be placed in the subcutaneous layer rather than breast glandular tissue or muscle. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework
- Fat transfer carries risks including infection, fat necrosis, cysts, contour irregularity, incomplete fat survival, and donor-site discomfort. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework
- The procedure harvests fat from one body area, processes it, and places it into another area. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework
- Fat transfer usually increases breast size by about one to one and a half cup sizes and is not equivalent to large implant augmentation. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework
- Autologous fat transfer is presented as an alternative to implants for some patients seeking enhancement or volume restoration after explant. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework
- Fat transfer avoids a permanent foreign body but has limitations and surgical risks. — Breast Implant Illness and Explant Surgery Framework