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The Baker grading is as follows
Grade I - breast normally soft and looks natural
Grade II - breast little firm and looks normal
Grade III - breast firm and looks abnormal (visible
distortion)
Grade IV - breast hard, painful and looks abnormal
(greater distortion)
Correction of capsular contracture ranges from surgical removal
of the implant capsule tissue to removal (and possible replacement)
of the implant itself. Capsular contracture may happen again
after this additional surgery.
Photograph 1 below shows Grade IV capsular contracture in
right breast of a 29-year-old woman seven years after subglandular
(on top of the muscle and under the breast glands) placement
of 560cc silicone gel-filled breast implants.
Photograph 1

2. DEFLATION or RUPTURE
When silicone gel-filled implants rupture, some women may
notice decreased breast size, hard knots, uneven appearance
of the breasts, pain or tenderness, tingling, swelling, numbness,
burning, or changes in sensation. Other women may unknowingly
experience a rupture without any symptoms (i.e., "silent
rupture"). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with equipment
specifically designed for imaging the breast may be used for
evaluating patients with suspected rupture or leakage of their
silicone gel-filled implant. Silicone gel may escape from
the fibrotic capsule around the implant, may migrate away
from the breast, and may cause lumps called granulomas to
form in the breast, chest wall, armpit, arm, or abdomen. Plastic
surgeons usually recommend removal of the implant if it has
ruptured, even if the silicone is still enclosed within the
scar tissue capsule, because the silicone gel may eventually
leak into surrounding tissues.
When saline-filled breast implants deflate, the saline solution
leaks either through an unsealed or damaged valve or through
a break in the implant shell. Implant deflation can occur
immediately or progressively over a period of days, months,
or years and is noticed by loss of size or shape of the implant.
Additional surgery is needed to remove deflated implants.
- For silicone gel and saline-filled implants,
some causes of rupture or deflation include:
- damage by surgical instruments during surgery
- overfilling or underfilling of saline (only) implant
- capsular contracture
- manually squeezing the breast to break the hard capsule
- trauma, injury, or intense physical manipulation
- excessive compression during mammographic imaging
- placement through the belly button
- normal aging of the implant
- unknown/unexplained reasons
Photograph 2 below shows a 30-year-old woman's left saline-filled
breast implant deflation. The suspected cause was the leaf-valve
design of the implant, which is no longer being used by manufacturers.
Photograph 2.

3. ADDITIONAL SURGERY & REMOVAL
WITHOUT REPLACEMENT
Women with breast implants may need additional surgery at
some point to replace or remove her implant(s) due to problems
such as deflation, capsular contracture, infection, shifting,
and calcium deposits. Women who do not have their implants
replaced may have cosmetically undesirable dimpling, puckering
of the breast following removal of the implant, or other unsatisfactory
cosmetic outcomes.
Photograph 3 below shows the same 29-year-old woman in Photograph
1 one year after removal of her silicone gel-filled breast
implants without replacement. Patients with large implants,
particularly those inserted subglandularly (on top of the
muscle and under the breast glands), may have a major cosmetic
deformity if they choose not to replace them or to undergo
additional reconstructive surgery.
Photograph 3
4. PAIN
Women may feel pain of varying degrees and lengths of time
following breast implant surgery. In addition, improper size,
placement, surgical technique, or capsular contracture may
result in pain. You should tell your doctor if you have pain.
5. DISSATISFACTION WITH COSMETIC
RESULTS
Dissatisfying results such as wrinkling, uneven sizes, implant
shifting, incorrect size, unanticipated shape, ability to
feel implant, scar deformity, irregular or raised scarring,
and/or sloshing may occur. Careful surgical planning and technique
can reduce but not always prevent such results. For saline-filled
implants with valves, you may be able to feel the valves.
Repeated surgeries to improve the appearance of the breasts
and/or to remove ruptured or deflated prostheses may result
in an unsatisfactory cosmetic outcome.
6. INFECTION
Infection can occur with any surgery and at any time. Most
infections appear within a few days to weeks after the
-surgery. Infections with an implant present are harder to
treat than infections in normal body tissues because infection
may not respond to antibiotics. The implant may have to be
removed and replaced after the infection is gone.
7. HEMATOMA/SEROMA
Hematoma is a collection of blood inside a body cavity and
a seroma is a collection of the watery portion of the blood
around the implant or around healing. A small scar can form
or a rupture may occur if the implant is damaged during draining
the incision. Post-operative hematoma and seroma may contribute
to infection or capsular contracture. Swelling, pain, and
bruising may result. A hematoma usually occurs soon after
surgery but may occur at any time or after injury to the breast.
While the body absorbs small hematomas and seromas, large
ones will require the placement of surgical drains for proper
healing. A small scar can form or a rupture may occur if the
implant is damaged during draining.
8. CHANGES IN NIPPLE AND BREAST
SENSATION
Feeling in the nipple and breast can increase or decrease
after implant surgery. The range of changes varies from intense
to no feeling in the nipple or breast after surgery. Changes
in feeling can be temporary or permanent and may affect sexual
response or the ability to nurse a baby.
9. CALCIUM DEPOSITS IN TISSUE AROUND
IMPLANT
Calcium deposits can be seen on mammograms and can be mistaken
for possible cancer, resulting in additional surgery to biopsy
or remove the implant to distinguish these deposits from cancer.
Calcium deposits may be felt as modules or bumps under the
skin around the implant.
10. DELAYED WOUND HEALING
In some cases, the incision site fails to heal normally or
takes longer to heal.
11. EXTRUSION
Unstable or weakened tissue covering and/or interruption of
wound healing may result in extrusion, (when the breast implant
comes through the skin). Surgery needed to correct this can
result in unacceptable scarring or breast tissue loss.
12. NECROSIS
Necrosis, the formation of dead tissue around the implant,
may prevent wound healing and require surgical correction
and/or implant removal.
A permanent scar may form.
13. TISSUE ATROPHY/CHEST WALL DEFORMITY
Pressure of the breast implant may cause the breast tissue
to thin and shrink. This can occur while implants are still
in place or following implant removal without replacement
14. INTERFERENCE WITH MAMMOGRAPHY
Interference with mammography due to breast implants may delay
or hinder the early detection of breast cancer either by hiding
suspicious wounds, injuries, or tumors or by making it more
difficult to include them in the image. Implants increase
the difficulty of both taking and reading mammograms. Women
who undergo reconstruction and have some breast tissue remaining
must continue to have mammography of that breast, as well
as of the other breast, to detect breast cancer. Mammography
requires breast compression (hard pressure) that could contribute
to implant rupture. When making appointments, women with implants
should tell the scheduler that they have breast implants.
Before mammography, women should also tell the radiologic
technologist about their implants. The technologist will then
take extra care during compression to reduce the risk of implant
rupture. The technologist will also use the special displacement
views to see as much as possible of the breast tissue.
15. UNEXPECTED MILK PRODUCTION AND
LEAKAGE
Following breast implant surgery, your body may begin to produce
milk. This production may cease spontaneously or after medication
is given to stop milk production. In other cases, removal
of the implant(s) may be needed.
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