The Daily Telegraph

Plastic surgeons warn of dangers of celebrity-inspired bottom lifts

- By Sarah Knapton Science editor

BOTCHED Brazilian bum lifts inspired by “curvy” celebritie­s such as Kim Kardashian are costing the NHS hundreds of thousands of pounds to put right, as it emerged a second woman has died from the procedure.

The British Associatio­n of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons has advised its members to stop performing the cosmetic operation until more informatio­n about its safety is known.

In August, Leah Cambridge, 29, a mother-of-three from Leeds, died after undergoing the procedure in Turkey, and yesterday the BBC reported that a second British woman in her late 20s had also lost her life during an operation. The surgery, which involves fat being taken from a part of the body and injected into the buttocks, has been made popular by celebritie­s promoting a curvier figure, the organisati­on said.

But a study at St Barts in London showed that the number of patients needing treatment following poor operations had risen sixfold since 2013, and had cost the hospital £63,000 over the past five years. Complicati­ons include severe bacterial infections such as MRSA, tissue death, scarring, wound ruptures and abscesses.

Although figures are not available because so many operations are carried out privately, experts estimate that hundreds of British women are having buttock lifts each year, often at clinics in Turkey, Poland and the US.

Mohammed Farid, a junior doctor who conducted the study, said: “As a trainee, it’s been staggering to see the lengths and the damage these patients will go through in the quest for cheaper options. I remember in one procedure, we found a piece of latex which had been left inside the patient’s buttock. This was one of the most shocking moments in my career, and the one that inspired me to conduct the study.”

The surgery – which also carries a risk that fat injected into large veins can travel to the heart or brain, leading to severe illness or death – has the highest death rate of all cosmetic surgery procedures, at an estimated onein-3,000 operations internatio­nally.

In 2014, Joy Williams, a 24-year-old British woman, died following buttock augmentati­on surgery in Thailand after her wounds became infected. Three years before, Claudia Aderotimi, 20, from Hackney, east London, died in an American hotel after the procedure.

Mary O’brien, an NHS consultant plastic surgeon at the Royal Derby Hospital, said: “The problem is this is highvolume fat. And if that fat ends up in a large vessel or a vein… it can get carried to the heart and to the lungs, and that’s what causes the fatality.

“One of the real problems that we face is people are drawn in to jumping on a plane for sun, sea, sand and surgery, and if it all goes well they come back on the plane.

“But then where’s their surgeon if things go wrong back home? And if they have a complicati­on out there, they can’t get back to this country.

“We’ve seen this with breast implants – the fashions change – and what governs those fashions? It’s social media, it is a celebrity culture.”

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