“Do you use drains during breast augmentation?”
I received an email the other day from a woman who had visited another surgeon regarding breast augmentation. During her consultation he told her that he routinely uses drains during the procedure. She wanted to know if I also use drains during breast augmentation.
For those of you who may not understand what a drain is, let me get this out of the way first. A drain is a small tube that is placed into a space within your body that is designed to pull fluid away from this space and usually into a collection device. By their nature there is a path through the skin that the drain will cross. Drains are used frequently during any procedure that is prone to develop a fluid collection or “seroma.” A common procedure within Plastic Surgery that usually requires drains would be an abdominoplasty where a large space is developed beneath the skin. Here is a picture of a drain:
To answer her question about whether or not I use drains, the answer is: Almost never during a primary breast augmentation. There are few instances when I would consider one and this is usually during a revision case when extensive work is performed on a breast capsule. The reason that I don’t use them is that I believe that they are not necessary and it has been well demonstrated that drains increase the risk of surgery requiring complications and significant capsular contracture in patients who have them.
Our websites www.beauty-surgeon.com and www.drmckane.com have additional information and before and after photographs of breast augmentation for review. I invite you to schedule a consultation with me if you would like to learn more about breast augmentation or the use of drains during a procedure. Please feel free to contact our office at (713) 661-5255 if you have any questions.
-Brice W. McKane, M.D.
© 2009, Dr. McKane. All rights reserved.

Leave a Reply