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Plastic Surgery Center
Aesthetic surgery
While most aesthetic surgery or
reconstructive procedures are essential to the overall health of a
child, they also can enhance self-image. The Texas Children’s
Plastic Surgery Center helps restore both form and function in
infants, children and young adults.
“Children and adolescents are acutely
aware of how they look,” said Dr. Samuel Stal. “If
any facial or bodily deformity, no matter how small, separates them
from their peers, children may experience self-consciousness and
social anxiety — self-esteem problems that can severely affect their
emotional and psychological development.”
Generally, a patient can undergo an
aesthetic procedure on an outpatient basis and leave the hospital
the same day.
With the onset of puberty, some
preteens and teenagers, both male and female, experience abnormal or
asymmetrical growth in the breast and chest walls. Usually due to
hormonal fluctuations of adolescence or genetic predisposition, this
condition can be corrected with reconstructive chest wall surgery
and breast reduction. The Plastic Surgery Center has developed
extensive expertise in these procedures, handling 50 or more cases each
year.
The center treats hundreds of
children and adolescents with congenital and acquired birthmarks
each year. Specialists are equipped to diagnose, treat and manage
congenital and vascular birthmarks such as hemangiomas,
malformations and pigmented birthmarks.
The center also offers several options
for laser treatment of port-wine stains and other vascular
birthmarks. Most children’s birthmarks are treated for aesthetic
reasons, but cancer prevention is another important reason for
treatment.
Learn more about the
birthmark clinic.
Parents of children and adolescents
may seek surgical correction of their children’s facial features,
usually due to their children’s functional or self-esteem problems.
The center offers treatment options including rhinoplasty (nasal
surgery) and otoplasty (ear surgery).
A child with chronic airway obstruction
caused by trauma or allergies may be a candidate for rhinoplasty,
the third most common surgical procedure performed at the center.
Symptoms include nasal congestion and nosebleeds, mouth breathing,
sleep disturbance, and reduction or loss of sense of smell.
By the age of 3 or 4, a child with
prominent ears can be assessed to determine if the condition is a
true deformity correctable by otoplasty. This 90-minute outpatient
procedure is the fourth most common procedure performed at the
center.
Learn more about one child's
otoplasty surgery.
Should parents seek assurance that
aesthetic plastic surgery is the best choice for correcting their
young child’s condition, the center provides counseling support to
help make the decision.
Additionally, a comprehensive
consultation is available for parents who wonder whether their child
is ready for aesthetic surgery and how he or she will look after
surgery. To help make the decision and envision the potential
change, video imaging allows children and parents to clarify
concerns about appearance.
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