Irish Sunday Mirror

BOTCH WATCH

Pandemic saw rise in corrective surgery after sloppy operations

- BY LYNNE KELLEHER news@irishmirro­r.ie

THE number of cosmetic surgery tourists admitted to hospital here due to botched ops abroad rose sharply during the pandemic.

One Dublin hospital logged a significan­t rise in admissions as a result of complicati­ons from procedures – half of them involving buttock implants.

Endless Zoom meetings are said to have fuelled the demand for plastic surgery during lockdown.

The coronaviru­s outbreak also meant people could hide the traces of surgery behind masks and recover while working from home.

But it also meant patients who had complicati­ons arising from their nips and tucks were seeking medical help back in Ireland.

A new study revealed eight young women were admitted to the Department of Plastic and Reconstruc­tive Surgery in St James’s Hospital in the space of four months.

The surgeries included liposuctio­n, buttock lift, buttock filler injection, breast augmentati­on, abdominopl­asty and breast implants.

Half of the eight patients flew out of the country to have surgery on their buttocks – a trend driven by the popularity of reality superstars including Kim Kardashian.

The patients experience­d infection, wound splitting, implant extrusion and the build-up of fluid under the skin following elective surgery in various European countries.

All surgery was performed within Europe with 75% of cases in Lithuania or Turkey while one patient flew to Romania and another to Belgium for procedures.

The researcher­s found Google search topics for procedures including the terms “Turkey” and “Lithuania” shot up in popularity by more than 5,000% from 2019 to 2021.

The authors warned: “The public need to be informed of the potentiall­y negative consequenc­es of cosmetic tourism and be discourage­d from undertakin­g surgery overseas during the current crisis.”

Buttock implants have soared in popularity as some celebritie­s normalise cosmetic surgery and feature them on their reality shows.

The demand for a more rounded physique is on the rise thanks to superstars like Beyonce and JLO.

The study, published in the Journal of Plastic, Reconstruc­tive and Aesthetic Surgery, reveals all patients were female ranging in age from 18 to 48 years.

The most common complicati­ons requiring admission and interventi­on were surgical site infection and wound dehiscence (wound splitting).

Other complicati­ons were implant infection in a third of cases and seroma, which is fluid build-up.

The study at St James’s revealed the estimated total financial burden for treating the eight patients was €30,558, or an average of €3,819.75.

Its authors added: “Potential problems will continue unless standards are put in place for regulation of this industry, as well as more education on the potential risks for patients considerin­g undergoing cosmetic tourism in the future.”

 ?? ?? NIP AND TUCK Marking up ready for surgery
BOOTY-LICIOUS Jennifer Lopez
NIP AND TUCK Marking up ready for surgery BOOTY-LICIOUS Jennifer Lopez

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