This post was written by Linda Brown and Published on

Having Kim Kardashian’s butt can be very dangerous to your health. Many women have died after undergoing a Brazilian butt lift!

Ideal Butt

Kim Kardashian or her sister Kylie Jenner have big cellulite free round buttocks that attract the envy of many women around the world. However, many patients who underwent cosmetic surgery to increase the size of their buttocks died as a result of the operation. This has led an international team of plastic surgeons to alert potential patients to the serious risks of this procedure.

Lattia Baumeister, 30, died on the operating table in Florida after a Brazilian butt lift. She was one of 33 people who died in the United States in the last five years because the fat transferred to her buttocks caused a fatal embolism.

Plastic surgery is actually relatively low risk for patients, but some surgeries are much more dangerous than others. The abdominal area is considered by professionals to be one of the most risky areas to work on, with a risk of major complications of about 4%. The procedure is complex and invasive because patients run the risk of developing blood clots that can spread to the heart and quickly become fatal.

In the Brazilian butt lift procedure, the surgeon removes the excess fat from different parts of the patient’s body and transfers it to the buttocks by injection. “It doesn’t take much finesse,” explained Dr. Mark Mofid, a plastic surgeon from San Diego.

In 2015, a study conducted with doctors in Colombia and Mexico reported high mortality rates associated with the procedure. The following year, a doctor in Texas presented a summary of the study, showing that there were eight cases of fat embolism that ended up in intensive care. Dr. Mark Mofid himself began to investigate the matter and discovered that 10 women had died in South Beach, alone, after undergoing Brazilian butt plastic surgery.

Most of the victims were mothers, including Ranika Hall, who had just had her first baby at the age of 25 and wanted to return to her pregnancy body. Heather Meadows, a mother of two, died in the same facility in Florida.

Padge-Victoria Windslowe was sentenced to several years in prison after this so-called non-certified transgender surgeon injected too much silicone into a dancer’s buttocks who later died. Dr. Mofid and his team published a study on the incidence of these deaths and their serious complications. They found that about one in 3,000 patients died from a pulmonary embolism. Twice as many patients developed chronic or serious complications. Large embolisms develop when a fat cell enters the bloodstream and goes into the lungs, which can be fatal or later cause heart and respiratory problems.

The American Society of Plastic Surgeons and partner organizations have established a task force to study the causes of these embolisms and alert doctors and patients to their findings. It now recommends injecting fat into a shallower area just below the skin. Although patients do not have the same aesthetic results, this change can save many lives.

References

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/voices/2019/01/31/plastic-surgery-brazilian-butt-lifts-florida-death-column/2374585002/