Women ONLY!!! Have you had a breast reduction?

spackham
spackham Posts: 252 Member
edited September 26 in Health and Weight Loss
I am thinking about getting a breast reduction. What size were you and what size are you now? Would you go smaller or larger if you could do it over? What health benefits come with it (no headaches, back problems)? How much did they remove on each one? I don't know what other questions to ask but thought I'd put this out there as I am starting to look into this.

Replies

  • BUMP i wanna know too.
  • QueenofCups
    QueenofCups Posts: 365 Member
    mine reduced on their own after losing weight. I was a 38DD 2 years ago, now I am a 34C
  • Charli666
    Charli666 Posts: 407
    i was considering a reduction, but was strongly advised to lose all my weight first, and they have naturally decreased in size. I'm glad i didn't have a reduction, I'd be devastated now!
  • jdavis193
    jdavis193 Posts: 972 Member
    I had one I went from 38/36 dd to a B my frame size it 5'2 i weighed about 127 at the time maybe a little more. The best thing ever. My back hurt all the time coudn't wear anything cute.
  • Daisy_May
    Daisy_May Posts: 505 Member
    I had one 2 years ago and it was the best thign I ever did!
    I went from a 40H to a 38 DD, right now I feel like it's the perfect size, I never wanted to be small I just didn't want to be HUGE.
    They took about 3 liters from each side, the recovery was bad for me as I got an infection but I would do it all over agian in a heart beat. I just wish I had done it years sooner!
  • 0plato0
    0plato0 Posts: 10 Member
    Oh yes BUMP.

    I'm a 32J, and I'd really like to hear peoples experiences of breat reduction surgery. Specifically in regards to future breast feeding.

    I'm determined to breastfeed my GP recomended I waited till after I've had children before I get the knockers "fixed"
  • Daisy_May
    Daisy_May Posts: 505 Member
    When I did did it I weighed just under 200lbs but I had lost weight done to 150 before and did lose a pound off my breasts, when I gained weight after the surgery I didn't gain any back there.
  • jdavis193
    jdavis193 Posts: 972 Member
    I had one 2 years ago and it was the best thign I ever did!
    I went from a 40H to a 38 DD, right now I feel like it's the perfect size, I never wanted to be small I just didn't want to be HUGE.
    They took about 3 liters from each side, the recovery was bad for me as I got an infection but I would do it all over agian in a heart beat. I just wish I had done it years sooner!

    I got an infection to. I started working out to early.. They didn't take my sides off like most dr.'s do. like under armpit.
  • jdavis193
    jdavis193 Posts: 972 Member
    Oh yes BUMP.

    I'm a 32J, and I'd really like to hear peoples experiences of breat reduction surgery. Specifically in regards to future breast feeding.

    I'm determined to breastfeed my GP recomended I waited till after I've had children before I get the knockers "fixed"

    I was able to breastfeed but didn't produce enough. The reduction was totally worth it. I was so miserable. They would hang to my belly button. I didn't have naything to hold them up. NO stomach
  • techie30
    techie30 Posts: 82 Member
    I started a 38D and am now a 36C (after 29lbs), will probably shrink more by the time I'm at my goal.
  • jdavis193
    jdavis193 Posts: 972 Member
    I remember the dr. telling me that now matter how much weight I lost they won't shrink that much. I was so huge for my size. Good luck. The best thing I could ever do.
  • Daisy_May
    Daisy_May Posts: 505 Member
    I had one 2 years ago and it was the best thign I ever did!
    I went from a 40H to a 38 DD, right now I feel like it's the perfect size, I never wanted to be small I just didn't want to be HUGE.
    They took about 3 liters from each side, the recovery was bad for me as I got an infection but I would do it all over agian in a heart beat. I just wish I had done it years sooner!

    I got an infection to. I started working out to early.. They didn't take my sides off like most dr.'s do. like under armpit.
    I had to pay to get the sides done but it was totally worth it, I got the infection befcause they didn't take my tubes out when they should have(stupid at home nurse service)
  • jdavis193
    jdavis193 Posts: 972 Member
    I had one 2 years ago and it was the best thign I ever did!
    I went from a 40H to a 38 DD, right now I feel like it's the perfect size, I never wanted to be small I just didn't want to be HUGE.
    They took about 3 liters from each side, the recovery was bad for me as I got an infection but I would do it all over agian in a heart beat. I just wish I had done it years sooner!

    I got an infection to. I started working out to early.. They didn't take my sides off like most dr.'s do. like under armpit.
    I had to pay to get the sides done but it was totally worth it, I got the infection befcause they didn't take my tubes out when they should have(stupid at home nurse service)

    I would love to have my sides done. Everyone's like you can't notice it. To me I can. I would't have that much back fat from bra if I did have it done. I've tone most of it. How much did you pay.
  • Daisy_May
    Daisy_May Posts: 505 Member
    I had one 2 years ago and it was the best thign I ever did!
    I went from a 40H to a 38 DD, right now I feel like it's the perfect size, I never wanted to be small I just didn't want to be HUGE.
    They took about 3 liters from each side, the recovery was bad for me as I got an infection but I would do it all over agian in a heart beat. I just wish I had done it years sooner!

    I got an infection to. I started working out to early.. They didn't take my sides off like most dr.'s do. like under armpit.

    I had to pay to get the sides done but it was totally worth it, I got the infection befcause they didn't take my tubes out when they should have(stupid at home nurse service)

    I would love to have my sides done. Everyone's like you can't notice it. To me I can. I would't have that much back fat from bra if I did have it done. I've tone most of it. How much did you pay.
    My reduction was covered by OHIP and because I was already under doing the sides was only an extra $1200, very worth while I can't imagine not having done it.
  • young1726
    young1726 Posts: 347 Member
    I would recommend waiting until you lose your weight. My sister and cousin both had HUGE boobies :) and they lost alot of weight and now their size is pretty perfect. You may not have to spend all the money and undergo the surgery.

    On another note, my mom had it done and she LOVES it.
  • kandyjo
    kandyjo Posts: 4,493 Member
    Question to those who shrank "naturally" were they "saggy" or did they tone up with your body?
  • magglett
    magglett Posts: 2,000
    Mine were like two pendulums ... you know ... big socks with watermelons stuffed into them and hanging down because gravity is cruel ... and the nipples? Holy Moly ... big big nipples. I had a reduction done years ago ... made me perky and gave me cute little normal sized nipples. That's got to be close to 20 years ago now and I haven't regretted it once. I gained and lost and re-gained weight again but I still love my ta ta's. I was very self conscious before the surgery. Today, with my size C's, I can still go bra-less. Thanks for reminding me how grateful I am to have had this surgery. :flowerforyou:
  • Phoenix_Rising
    Phoenix_Rising Posts: 11,417 Member
    I'll copy and paste what I wrote in a moment, but look here: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/201098-very-heavy-breasts-exercises-reductions
  • Phoenix_Rising
    Phoenix_Rising Posts: 11,417 Member
    I had a breast reduction when I was 19. It didn't hurt as much as I thought it did and I still have the scars all under each breast and down from each nipple but it was a small price to pay for comfort.

    It did feel like a small car was on my chest the first day, tons of pressure but not pain because I was on pain meds. I also didin't need drains put in, but I have seen others who had to have drains put in to drain off excess fluid retention in that area.

    Also there was some nipple numbness for a few years but then it started coming back. They will warn you that the feeling may never come back though so that is a chance you must take. Depending on your doctor also if they can preserve the links to your mamary glands ask them to so that in the even you have kids and want to breast feed it would still be possible. I didin't have that option so when I had all 5 kids I had to bottle feed. No big deal for me but for some it is a deal breaker.
    I had a breast reduction done at 22. It's pretty easy and worry-free, but it hurts and you'll need to take time off work/school. The scars are pretty bad ,but they do fade eventually. The biggest issue for me was the rule of not lifting ANYTHING for the first while... it was pretty irritating, lol. I live in Canada, and it was covered by our health system. I know that they often won't do it unless you're at (or near) a healthy body weight, so use it as motivation! :smile:

    Any other questions, just let me know!

    Ooooh honey, this is my favorite topic to advise other women on!!!!!

    In high school, I was thin with a C.
    By freshman year of college, I was a D.
    By sophomore year, I was a DD.
    After that.... I was well beyond a DDD.
    It was HORRIBLE.

    I had a breast reduction about 3 years ago. BEST DECISION I EVER MADE. Ever.

    The hardest part was cutting through the insurance red tape. RESEARCH YOUR INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS NOW. Mine required "alternative treatments" DOCUMENTED for at least a year or maybe it was two. I can't remember.

    "Alternative treatments" (per my insurance company) were taking tylenol for the pain, going to a chiropractor, wearing a support bra.... oh jeez, I can't even remember all their stupid, stupid, STUPID "alternatives".

    My first request was denied. It was based on a doctor doing measurements (if your nipple falls below the crease of where the bottom of your breast meets with your chest) and verifying I was a candidate. I submitted an OVERWHELMING appeal to them.

    I had my nurse (who was very sympathetic) pull my records and provide me documentation of every complaint of a back ache or head ache I'd ever had. (So complain to your doctor now!!). I had them provide documentation of my weight loss over the years (30 lbs at that point??) to show that my breast size hadn't decreased (or if it had decreased as I'd lost weight, my breasts were still HUGE regardless.) I had been to a neurologist for migraines and had them write a letter stating my breast size caused severe tension to my shoulders and neck, thus a contributing cause to my debilitating migraines.

    I even included a personal statement of how my quality of life was hampered by my encumbering breasts -- couldn't get into positions in yoga, couldn't run due to the pain, had a difficult time holding my toddler due to my breasts being in the way!!!!, couldn't fit into normal shirts, couldn't find a bathing suit, my poor posture due to slouching to hide them, how it impacted my self esteem.... I laid it all out for them.

    In the end, I won the appeal and had my surgery with a WONDERFUL surgeon in my area. If you get to that point, research your surgeon well. Shop around, not for price but for SKILL. My surgeon specializes in breast reconstruction for cancer patients. He did an AMAZING job. The docs should have pictures on file to show you the before and afters you can expect. I was able to see an album that had about 20 reductions so I could get a realistic idea. They will not turn out like Pam Anderson. They will still be slightly saggy and even odd shaped depending, BUT the pain from the weight will be GONE!!!!

    The surgery itself left me in pain for a day or so. Achy muscle type pain. Drainage tubes run "under" the breast, where it meets with the chest. The tubes extend down to about waist level, with bulbs at the end. (You pin these to your shirt.) It allows for the wound to heal properly. You empty the drainage bulbs and record the amounts, so the doc can measure and make sure everything is healing correctly and nothing is pooling on the inside. They remove the tubes after a week (???) which is an odd sensation but not painful.

    Generally, I think they say it takes 2 weeks to fully heal. It was HARD for me not to lift ANYTHING because I had a 2.5 year old who wanted to cuddle. She adapted well and was cognizant of mommy's 'boo boo'. I ended up taking 3 weeks to heal. I had more severe pain at the incision sites. (Taking a shower resulted in pain as the water hit them. Um.... a comparison of pain levels.... like a shower when you have engorged breasts from nursing?? Not severe but OW.) Instead of losing sensitivity, I was HYPERsensitive for a long time.

    My sister had a reduction when she was 15. Her situation was extreme. I was 26. Neither she nor I lost nipple sensation. She had a small spot under the breast that wasn't healing correctly. (It was a small open wound, nothing gory, just not healing over.) They placed a small patch of skin cells (looked like a tiny piece of clear tape) directly on the wound. The new healthy skin cells began reproducing and healed over the wound quickly.

    I still have numbness on my incisions on the side of my body. Look online for pictures (but make sure no one is around, as they are very graphic.... topless, duh! lol). The cuts are "anchor cuts". They circle the nipple (lift it out, do not detach it, cut down the size of the aereola to match the smaller breast size), cut down the breast to the bottom crease, then cut from the inside (near the breast bone) to the outside, all the way back to under the arm pits. (The length of the side incision depends on how much skin they have to remove from your body, due to the size of your breast. They have to taper the skin back in.... like you would if sewing cloth together, I guess.) Under my armpits is where I have numbess on the scar lines. Not an issue at all.

    In some swimsuits, tank tops, halter dresses, my under arm scars show. I don't mind. I'm SO HAPPY with my reduction that I gladly tell everyone how wonderful it is and how much my quality of life has improved!!!!!

    I think my happiness shows by this novel I just wrote :smile:

    Find out your insurance requirements for them to cover (even a fraction) of the surgery. Start cutting through that red tape now.
  • janack
    janack Posts: 33 Member
    Like a couple of other's here I would strongly suggest you lose the weight before you do the reduction. If all goes right you might just need a lift in the end. I went down a bra size after I lost 25 lbs. Sucks for me, not blessed up top, LOL. I have had two very good friends get reductions and then went on to lose weight. One of them is nearly flat now and the other is a lot smaller than she wanted. Both wish they would have waited.
  • Phoenix_Rising
    Phoenix_Rising Posts: 11,417 Member
    Like a couple of other's here I would strongly suggest you lose the weight before you do the reduction. If all goes right you might just need a lift in the end. I went down a bra size after I lost 25 lbs. Sucks for me, not blessed up top, LOL. I have had two very good friends get reductions and then went on to lose weight. One of them is nearly flat now and the other is a lot smaller than she wanted. Both wish they would have waited.

    I agree to wait and see how the weight loss impacts you.

    At 15, my sister's size increased back to a DD or more.
    Mine were reduced to a C and grew back into D.
    Losing weight never touched our cup sizes.

    It would suck to lose weight and have them shrink to nothing though :frown:
  • Nikstergirl
    Nikstergirl Posts: 1,549 Member
    I had one!!!! Best thing I ever did!!!

    Here's a little bit of my story... I was large breasted and in a 32C in 5th grade. By high school I was 115 pounds and a 36DDD. College came along and I was a 36EE. At 19 my back had started to curve and I was getting dents in my shoulders and had chronic lower back pain. Since my Mom had had one as well, she took me to the same doctor and he recommende we do it then. I was 130 pounds and 19 years old. They took just over 5 pounds off my chest and I ended up being a 36B/C!!!! I was SOOOOO happy! Now after 20 years and 2 kids and gaining and losing the same 40 pounds a million times, they are still pretty good! I'm happily a 34C currently and love that I have a little cleavage but nothing heavy or hard to fit. The recovery wasn't hard, not fun by any means, but I did it over the summer so I didn't have to miss school and nobody really noticed at first, they all just thought I lost weight! I told them, yes, I lost 5 pounds!!! LOL! I was not able to breastfeed, literally never got any milk at all, but I was warned that would happen. I still had two of the most healthy,, happy well-adjusted boys ever who are now teenagers and I don't regret my decision to do this for one minute! At the time my parent's insurance covered it, but I have no idea what the rules are now.

    I would also recommend being at or very close to your goal weight as I have known girls who have done it and then lost a bunch of weight and found themselves too small! Not something you want after being large for so long! That being said, I have plenty of friends who have done it and are very happy, as I am!!!! Good luck in your decision!
  • Tangerine302
    Tangerine302 Posts: 1,509 Member
    I love looking at before and after pictures of weight loss. Here and other sites as well. One thing I always notice is how large the top starts and what is left when the weight is lost. Sometimes you just wonder where they went??? :) How they could start so large and end up being normal.
    I would most definitely wait until the weight was lost if you could, just to see what is actually going to be there.
  • QueenofCups
    QueenofCups Posts: 365 Member
    Question to those who shrank "naturally" were they "saggy" or did they tone up with your body?

    Mine were a tad saggy at first, but I think a lot of that had to do with how fast I lost most of the weight and the fact I was pregnant and/pr breastfeeding for 2 yrs prior to losing the weight, so it all went out of that area pretty quickly. Now, I am not as saggy anymore and they keep getting firmer as time goes on.
  • evertongirl
    evertongirl Posts: 120 Member
    I was recently told that no matter how much weight you lose your boobs wont get below what you were around age 18 - so if you had big boobs then you still will after losing weight.

    I had my reduction 14 years ago - best thing I ever did. It is painful but as long as your rest and give it time to heal it will be good. Ive put weight on since having it and they got a little bigger and now im losing it again they have almost got back to post surgery size - which Im happy with still. I hated them being big!
  • jlpdelorme
    jlpdelorme Posts: 44
    I am 33 years old and just had my breast reduction 13 days ago. I can already tell you that I don't regret a thing. I was spilling out of a 36DD and the were NOT perky at all. I was getting headaches and major neck pain when I worked out (zumba). I had thought about it for years but the neck pain really made me do it. The PS was skeptical that insurance would cover it because he thought I really needed a lift vs reduction. BUT, a reduction includes a lift and insurance approved it. I already LOVE them. It was virtually pain free!! I think I will end up a small C and it is perfect for me. I had just lost 32 lbs but that didn't help any with the sagging. Feel free to email me with any questions. You will read lots of horror stories on the internet but the surgery and recovery have been great for me!
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