The Inframammary Fold (IMF): A Poorly Appreciated Landmark in Prosthetic/Alloplastic Breast Aesthetic and Reconstructive Surgery—Personal Experience

Abstract

Abstract: The inframammary fold (IMF) is the most critical visual landmark that affects final aesthetic outcome of augmentation mammoplasty and even post-mastectomy alloplastic breast reconstruction. Unfortunately, structural integrity of this landmark is greatly overlooked and very often neglected. Excessive undermining of the lower breast pole with aggressive disruption/lowering and subsequent poor reconstitution of the IMF scaffold combined with imbalanced implant-tissue dynamics may result in downward implant displacement with creep bottoming and upward tilt of the nipples. The current report reviews the experience of the senior author (BA) over 30 years in breast aesthetic and reconstructive surgery with IMF reconstruction and fixation to the chest wall at the inferior border of the implant. Illustrative cases are presented. Level of Evidence V: This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266. © 2017, Springer Science+Business Media New York and International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.

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Breast augmentation, Breast reconstruction, Imf, Inframammary fold, One-stage breast reconstruction, Adult, Allografts, Anatomic landmarks, Breast implantation, Breast implants, Breast neoplasms, Cohort studies, Esthetics, Female, Follow-up studies, Humans, Mammaplasty, Mastectomy, Middle aged, Patient satisfaction, Risk assessment, Treatment outcome, United states, Wound healing, Allograft, Anatomic landmark, Breast implant, Breast tumor, Cohort analysis, Comparative study, Follow up, Human, Pathology, Physiology, Procedures, Statistics and numerical data

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