Abstract

In 1998, the German Association of Plastic Surgeons started a new quality assurance program based on a standardized questionnaire to examine the tracer diagnosis "breast hypertrophy." The authors present the results of a pilot study evaluating 799 patients (mean age, 38 years). Breast reduction was performed as an inpatient procedure in 99% of patients. Mean weight reduction was 1,135 g (range, 140-3,870 g). The inverted-T scar technique was used in 45% of patients, the vertical scar technique in 52% of patients, and other techniques were restricted to 2% of patients. The selection of technique was based on the choice of the surgeon. The overall incidence of complications was 21.5%, and included predominantly wound dehiscence, without marked differences between the two techniques. Less than 10 years after the introduction of a new technique for breast reduction with reduced length of scar, it is now used as often as traditional methods.

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