Beginners Guide to Breast Augmentation

17 Apr 2009
Beginners Guide to Breast Augmentation

The NRI community from all over the world has opted to choose surgery tourism in India for health recovery at cheap price. The word surgery tourism in India here means traveling to India for health recovery and touring famous Indian destinations after or before getting the surgery. People of Indian & Asian origin in countries like, U.S.A, U.K, Oman, U.A.E and Saudi Arabia and Europe feel safe in the hands of Indian Doctors, because Indian doctors have proved themselves in providing excellent healthcare services in the field of obesity surgery, plastic surgery, orthopaedic surgery, dental surgery spine surgery and infertility treatment and have made NRI’s happy with the results. With world class health facilities, zero waiting time and most importantly one tenth of medical costs spent in the U.S or U.K, India is becoming a preferred medical tourism destination and also matching the medical treatment services NRI’s prefer India because it is affordable cost medical treatment options as compared to treatment available in their own resident destinations. Private hospitals are making deliberate efforts to attract medical tourists for better profits. The ministry of health and family welfare including medical tourism industry in India have set up a task force to design a strategy for health tourism. However, popularity of modern Indian healthcare is no more a secret. India has been offering updated surgical methods for health benefit to both international and domestic patients.

NRI’s are traveling to Indian medical locations and modernized surgery hospitals of Chennai, Goa, Delhi and Mumbai to get health recovery, in increasing number. The most commonly sought medical procedures in India include weight loss surgery or obesity surgery, heart surgery, orthopedic surgery, cosmetic surgery and dental treatment with infertility surgery. The reason, India is a favorable international medical destination is because it’s infrastructure and technology is par with the top medical centers in the U.S.A, U.K and Europe. India has one of the best hospitals and treatment centers in the world with the best facilities. India is promoting the “high-tech healing” of its private healthcare sector as a state-of-the-art. Indian hospitals at metro cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad and Chennai have established world-class expertise in practices such as cardiac care, cosmetic surgery, orthopaedic surgery and dentistry. Indian hospitals have expertise in both surgical and rejuvenation procedure, robotic surgery which was a dream once, Indian doctors had made it true and possible in India. NRI patients in developed countries are looking overseas for medical treatment like cosmetic surgery, cardiac bypass surgery, hair transplant surgery, obesity surgery, cancer surgery, infertility treatment and spine surgery. India is capitalizing on its low cost medical services and highly trained doctors to appeal to these “international medical travelers.” Even with airfare, the cost of going for an international surgery is markedly cheaper, and the quality of services is often better than that found in the United States and U.K. Surgery tourism, an unexplored segment in India, brings about one and half lakh tourists to India each year for advanced surgery, this figure is increasing each year.

 

Indian doctors have excellent qualifications and skills like their counterparts in the U.K, Australia and U.S. A recent article in “India Today” quoted that Indian hospitals and doctors have become the health care destination for foreigners. When you can get world class orthopedic surgery in Chennai at half the cost as in the West, or even in the Gulf, then it is certainly cost effective. For e.g.: A total knee replacement in some of the private hospitals in the Gulf costs about 50,000 U.A.E Dirhams (17 000 U.S$). The same treatment can be provided in India for less then three fourths of the cost. Abroad natives come to India for health recovery as well as visiting the cultural heritage of India this is termed as ‘medical tourism’. Another peculiarity is reversal of tourist traffic from developed nations to third world for cheaper treatment. But it is confusing how a sick person can be on a holiday and enjoy leisure like any other tourist. Ignoring this fundamental question, surgery tourism also called medical tourism is widely opted by NRIs to get standard healthcare at low cost. For more details less cost medical treatment and medical tourism in India visit on http://www.forerunnershealthcare.com and enquiry@forerunnershealthcare.com

Watch the video related to surgery

Women decide on breast augmentation for all kinds of reasons. Learn what you should know before having breast augmentation surgery in this video from a professional plastic surgeon. … plastic surgery cosmetic breast augmentation

Help answer the question about surgery

How long before surgery can I get a tattoo?
I am having arthroscopic knee surgery in the beginning of the summer and wondering if I can get a tattoo before then. I only ask because the last time I had this surgery, one of the pre-op questions involved tattoos. At the time I wasn't concerned with the issue, so I didn't think to ask. I appreciate any responses from those familiar with this issue. Thank you.

9 Responses to Beginners Guide to Breast Augmentation

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Zain S

April 17th, 2009 at 2:41 pm

get whatever michael jackson got. he went from an attractive black man to an ugly white woman….if thats not a change in overall appearance, idk what is…yeah. and see how great he turned out, so go for it!

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Because*you*were*home

April 17th, 2009 at 2:58 pm

Are you going to a respiratory specialist? I sure hope so. ask that doc the question…He/She knows you and your situation best….as for the scar…yes they can remove it completely…again you'll need a specialist for that, But right now don't you think there are more important things then a scar……..think of your lungs …for now…..and not the scar.

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Jeff P

April 18th, 2009 at 12:35 am

Your vet would have suggested that if he thought it would fix the problem. Obviously he think the surgery is the best option. You could call around and get a second opinion from another vet.

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Staci

April 18th, 2009 at 7:14 am

Yes there can be many side affect from laser surgery. And you have to really look after your skin (like not go into direct sunlight.) The best advice I can give you is to consult your doctor b4 you do anything.

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toripriestess

April 18th, 2009 at 12:05 pm

call your local hospital and ask someone there would be your best bet. It is safest if you ask a professional regarding this.

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csr

April 20th, 2009 at 2:29 am

The surgery will help the CTS but not have any effect on the arthritis. The surgery is effective. My mum had the surgery many years ago and I think it took about 4 weeks for her to be back to normal function. Yes you sre limited post op, but you should have physio to help do teh right movements and to gain fuction ASAP;

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zetakittyrx

April 20th, 2009 at 2:06 pm

It depends on the type of fracture, and just how severe it is. It also depends on whether your local vet has the knowledge and experience to be able to do the surgery, or whether your dog is going to have to see an orthopaedic specialist. As well as the surgery, your dog will need painkillers and antibiotics. Has your vet giving you an estimate of costs?

The two main surgical options for femoral fractures are intramedullary pinning- where a length of metal that is inserted into the middle of the bone, or plating- where a metal plate is attached to the outside of the bone with special screws. Many regular vet clinics do not have the equipment on hand to be able to do bone plating, so have to hire this in at extra cost. Pinning is probably a bit cheaper, but isn't appropriate for all fractures.

Based on what most vets around here charge, I would guess that you're looking at $600-$700 as an absolute minimum and potentially up around the $1000+ mark. This covers anaesthesia, the surgery itself, and any additional medications that need to be given. It might be worth checking if your vet is willing to organise a payment plan or if they offer something like CareCredit, which exists in Australia, the USA and Canada (I'm not sure about other countries).

I hope that helps.

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Quentin

April 20th, 2009 at 4:55 pm

Maybe some sort of plastic surgery? Sometimes women are a little shy about their nipping and tucking.

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sooo tired

April 21st, 2009 at 1:12 am

There are two types of surgery for a meniscus tear… repair or a menisectomy (where they just trim away the torn part). In younger people depending on the size of the tear a repair is more common. Repairs are better in the long run because you aren't loosing any cartilage, but the recovery time is about 9-10 weeks rather than 3-4.

I had a meniscus repair surgery done just about 1 year ago tomorrow. I would say that the surgery was a success. It's hard to tell exactly because i sustained an MCL tear/small meniscus tear 9 weeks after surgery to the same knee, but for the most part, the orginal pain has gone away.

For me, it was an out pt. procedue. surgery was i think 1.5 hours (they did some other stuff). arthoscopic. 3 small incisions. was on crutches 50% weight bearing for 3 weeks, full leg hinged brace for 4 weeks. PT for 12 weeks. The pain for the first week was pretty intense and steadily decreased, however for the first month you're gonna be thinking "what did I do". It WILL take awhile to feel better.

Surgery depends on how much pain you're in. It's worth it because it'll save your knees and the chances that the tear will heal are fairly high.

I have another tear in my other knee and have plans to get the surgery again in about 8 months… counting down the days because for me, the pain takes me off my bicycle more often then not right now.

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