En bloc Removal of a Breast Implant – What Does it Mean? And Yes I Do Them *When Possible

Posted on August 15, 2016

shutterstock_86267800I do a lot of breast surgery.

Not only am I a female plastic surgeon, I did an additional breast fellowship in addition to my plastic surgery residency. As an expert in breast, people refer a lot of secondary cases to me to do breast implant revision surgery. Yes, the tough cases.

Breast implant revision surgery can mean many things. It depends on your goals and what your issues are. Revision ranges from a simple implant exchange, to capsule removal and implant exchange, to capsule and implant removal. And many times this also involves doing a breast lift.

I keep getting inquiries about if I do “en bloc removal” of the breast implant. So I thought I should write a blog on it. Yes, I do en bloc removal of implants.

First lets get the terminology down.

Imagine your capsule is like a balloon of scar around the implant. Many times, particularly when I see really old implants, the actual breast implant shell may not be intact, but your capsule (the scar your body made around the implant years ago) around the implant IS. In most implants, even leaking ones, the silicone is not flying around your body – it is caught by the capsule. This whole capsule thing can look like a round hard white ball of scar, with the implant inside. When I am dissecting this, I hug the side of the capsule, and gently dissect it free from the surrounding tissue. It is like a little round present. I do not see the implant at all. I like to keep the capsule intact, so I can see the extent of the capsule, and also if the implant has leaked, I want to keep the silicone from getting into the surrounding tissue.

Not all implants can be removed en bloc though. For me, en bloc is always my preference, but there are some circumstances which make me change course.

So, to remove en bloc or not en bloc? En bloc is almost always the goal, with the exceptions as outlined above.