#plastic surgery procedure
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rajatgupta9898 · 1 year ago
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Facelift Surgery in Delhi | Dr. Rajat Gupta
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Facelift, medically known as rhytidectomy, is a surgical procedure that is done to improve the visible signs of ageing in the face and neck. Depending on the amount of lax skin and the depth of fold lines, the surgeon will decide on the type of facelift procedure to be undertaken.
more info: https://drrajatgupta.com/facelift/
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healthcare-industry · 1 year ago
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Plastic Surgery in India
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Plastic surgery is a branch of medicine that deals with the restoration, reconstruction, or alteration of the human body.
Types
It is a broad field that encompasses many different types of procedures, including:
Aesthetic surgery: This type of surgery is performed to improve a person's appearance. Common aesthetic procedures include rhinoplasty (nose reshaping), blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery), breast augmentation, and liposuction.
Reconstructive surgery: This type of surgery is performed to repair or reconstruct a part of the body that has been damaged or deformed by injury, disease, or birth defect. Common reconstructive procedures include breast reconstruction after mastectomy, cleft lip and palate repair, and burn surgery.
Microsurgery: This type of surgery uses very small instruments and techniques to repair or reconstruct small structures in the body. Microsurgery is often used in reconstructive surgery, such as to reattach a severed finger or to repair a damaged nerve.
Symptoms: 
There are no specific symptoms of plastic surgery. However, some people may experience pain, swelling, bruising, or numbness in the area of the surgery.
Causes: 
Plastic surgery is typically performed for cosmetic or reconstructive reasons. Cosmetic surgery is performed to improve a person's appearance, while reconstructive surgery is performed to repair or reconstruct a part of the body that has been damaged or deformed.
Diagnosis: 
A plastic surgeon will typically perform a physical examination and discuss the patient's goals for the surgery. The surgeon may also order imaging tests, such as an MRI or CT scan, to assess the extent of the damage or deformity.
Treatments: 
The specific treatment for plastic surgery will vary depending on the type of procedure being performed. However, some common treatments include:
Incision: An incision is made in the skin to access the area of the surgery.
Excision: Tissue may be removed from the area of the surgery.
Implants: Implants may be used to add volume or structure to the area of the surgery.
Grafts: Grafts of tissue from another part of the body may be used to repair or reconstruct the area of the surgery.
Risks: 
The risks of plastic surgery vary depending on the type of procedure being performed. However, some common risks include:
Infection: The incision site may become infected.
Bleeding: There may be bleeding from the incision site.
Scarring: There may be scarring at the incision site.
Allergic reaction: The patient may have an allergic reaction to the anesthesia or the materials used in the surgery.
Procedure: 
The specific procedure for plastic surgery will vary depending on the type of procedure being performed. However, some common steps in plastic surgery include:
Anesthesia: The patient will be given anesthesia to numb the area of the surgery.
Incision: An incision is made in the skin to access the area of the surgery.
Surgery: The surgeon performs the desired procedure.
Sutures: The incision is closed with sutures.
Bandages: The incision is bandaged.
Recovery: 
The recovery time for plastic surgery varies depending on the type of procedure being performed. However, some common steps in recovery include:
Rest: The patient will need to rest after the surgery.
Ice: The incision site may be iced to reduce swelling and pain.
Elevation: The incision site may be elevated to reduce swelling and pain.
Bandages: The incision will be bandaged.
Sutures: The sutures will be removed after a few days.
Success rate: 
The success rate of plastic surgery varies depending on the type of procedure being performed. However, most plastic surgery procedures are successful in achieving the desired results.
Cost in India: 
The cost of plastic surgery in India varies depending on the type of procedure being performed and the surgeon's fees. However, plastic surgery is generally more affordable in India than in other countries.
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indicurehealthservices · 2 years ago
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Know Everything about Plastic Surgery in India
Indicure is one of the leading and trusted name in medical tourism for plastic surgery in India. Don’t worry about your health when you choose Indicure as we choose only a selected few surgeon which are experienced and professional. We offer various kinds of plastic surgery like body contouring, face surgery, breast surgery etc. Visit us to know more about plastic surgery procedure.
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mishkakagehishka · 10 months ago
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"We're old moms, we can't wait to stop breastfeeding so we can get [very excited, shrill even] botooooox!!!"
We are never making it out of the patriarchy.
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haggishlyhagging · 1 year ago
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During the '80s, mannequins set the beauty trends—and real women were expected to follow. The dummies were "coming to life," while the ladies were breathing anesthesia and going under the knife. The beauty industry promoted a "return to femininity" as if it were a revival of natural womanhood—a flowering of all those innate female qualities supposedly suppressed in the feminist '70s. Yet the "feminine" traits the industry celebrated most were grossly unnatural—and achieved with increasingly harsh, unhealthy, and punitive measures.
The beauty industry, of course, has never been an advocate of feminist aspirations. This is not to say that its promoters have a conscious political program against women's rights, just a commercial mandate to improve on the bottom line. And the formula the industry has counted on for many years—aggravating women's low self-esteem and high anxiety about a "feminine" appearance—has always served them well. (American women, according to surveys by the Kinsey Institute, have more negative feelings about their bodies than women in any other culture studied.) The beauty makers' motives aren't particularly thought out or deep. Their overwrought and incessant instructions to women are more mindless than programmatic; their frenetic noise generators create more static than substance. But even so, in the '80s the beauty industry belonged to the cultural loop that produced backlash feedback. Inevitably, publicists for the beauty companies would pick up on the warning signals circulating about the toll of women's equality, too—and amplify them for their own purposes.
"Is your face paying the price of success?" worried a 1988 Nivea skin cream ad, in which a business-suited woman with a briefcase rushes a child to day care and catches a glimpse of her career-pitted skin in a store window. If only she were less successful, her visage would be more radiant. "The impact of work stress . . . can play havoc with your complexion," Mademoiselle warned; it can cause "a bad case of dandruff," "an eventual loss of hair" and, worst of all, weight gain. Most at risk, the magazine claimed, are "high-achieving women," whose comely appearance can be ravaged by "executive stress." In ad after ad, the beauty industry hammered home its version of the backlash thesis: women's professional progress had downgraded their looks; equality had created worry lines and cellulite. This message was barely updated from a century earlier, when the late Victorian beauty press had warned women that their quest for higher education and employment was causing "a general lapse of attractiveness" and "spoiling complexions."
The beauty merchants incited fear about the cost of women's occupational success largely because they feared, rightly, that that success had cost them—in profits. Since the rise of the women's movement in the '70s, cosmetics and fragrance companies had suffered a decade of flat-to-declining sales, hair-product merchandisers had fallen into a prolonged slump, and hairdressers had watched helplessly as masses of female customers who were opting for simple low-cost cuts defected to discount unisex salons. In 1981, Revlon's earnings fell for the first time since 1968; by the following year, the company's profits had plunged a record 40 percent. The industry aimed to restore its own economic health by persuading women that they were the ailing patients—and professionalism their ailment. Beauty became medicalized as its lab-coated army of promoters, and real doctors, prescribed physician-endorsed potions, injections for the skin, chemical "treatments" for the hair, plastic surgery for virtually every inch of the torso. (One doctor even promised to reduce women's height by sawing their leg bones.) Physicians and hospital administrators, struggling with their own financial difficulties, joined the industry in this campaign. Dermatologists faced with a shrinking teen market switched from treating adolescent pimples to "curing" adult female wrinkles. Gynecologists and obstetricians frustrated with a sluggish birthrate and skyrocketing malpractice premiums traded their forceps for liposuction scrapers. Hospitals facing revenue shortfalls opened cosmetic-surgery divisions and sponsored extreme and costly liquid-protein diet programs.
The beauty industry may seem the most superficial of the cultural institutions participating in the backlash, but its impact on women was, in many respects, the most intimately destructive—to both female bodies and minds. Following the orders of the '80s beauty doctors made many women literally ill. Antiwrinkle treatments exposed them to carcinogens. Acid face peels burned their skin. Silicone injections left painful deformities. "Cosmetic" liposuction caused severe complications, infections, and even death. Internalized, the decade's beauty dictates played a role in exacerbating an epidemic of eating disorders. And the beauty industry helped to deepen the psychic isolation that so many women felt in the '80s, by reinforcing the representation of women's problems as purely personal ills, unrelated to social pressures and curable only to the degree that the individual woman succeeded in fitting the universal standard—by physically changing herself.
-Susan Faludi, Backlash: the Undeclared War Against American Women
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elegantgothicoctopi · 5 months ago
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Although my company and certainly the department I am involved in doesn't do much with the GI Joe toy franchise anymore over the years I've been very much exposed to it through the job and I can say with confidence seeing every new iteration of the franchise that any and all attempts to modernize Baroness' design be it her hair, glasses, or face is just awful like let her have the lame middle part hair and widow peak, let her have the giant granny glasses, and for the love of god understand that there is a difference between a woman having visible cheekbones and looking like a Instagram model who just got her buccal fat carved out on an "all expenses paid" trip to Dubai.
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lizardmonet · 8 days ago
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maybe it’s because of the medical trauma i endured for most of middle school but i cannot imagine a world where i voluntarily get a surgery/procedure that’s not medically necessary. just stepping foot in a doctor’s office for a routine check up has me shaking like a leaf
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sinistersuns · 3 months ago
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love realizing i have dysphoria from something i THOUGHT i fixed a year ago that’s so fucking cool
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rajatgupta9898 · 1 year ago
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Liquid Facelift in Delhi | Dr. Rajat Gupta
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A SMAS ectomy is preferred for patients who have bulky faces. During a SMAS ectomy, a portion of the SMAS is removed between 2 lines. These lines are then joined, automatically causing a lift due to the tightness. This also ensures that the face looks thinner and more proportionate. 
more info: https://drrajatgupta.com/facelift/procedure-of-facelift/
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thatdemiboymess · 2 months ago
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Hey. Hey, listen to me. There's no shame if you want plastic surgery or any other cosmetic procedure. Do you hear me? It's your body, and it is your choice, and if you want to change the way you look for any reason then that is up to you. Your body. Your choice. Ok?
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kelvintimeline · 11 months ago
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also didnt mean to post two different heath ledger films, lmao, the queue decided to put brokeback on my blog today
but it works out!! i think heath leadger is part of what i'm talking about
he's obviously VERY beautiful but even his face is more... natural than what we have now, like, he was allowed imperfections. he isn't 20 different deliberate cosmetic surgeries merging into one person (i don't doubt he had any, like he probably did, but not like we see now)
he feels more authentic. beautiful in a way films demand but still like... just a guy
it adds to the vibe of his films
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ntls-24722 · 2 years ago
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ok so i feel like it's about time i've talked about the weird, convoluted headcanon lore i've made for DJMM. everything i leave in my head for too long gets distorted and unrecognizable from.the source
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ok so i think a lot of DJMM enjoyers have seen this tweet and while it's fake, because there's like 5 sentences alluding to DJMM in the entire game i've accepted it as fact and I went so overboard with the detail that it says home language. Not like, "original language" or nothing like that, home language
So, alongside the fact that DJMM has a couple things implying that he wasn't originally from Fazbear Entertainment (why would fazbear entertainment issue a warranty... to themselves?...), and that there also just happens to be a wedding dj company called The Music Man IRL that I found by accident, I kind of just made this whole weird thing that before he was bought by Fazbear Entertainment he was a Wedding DJ in Japan.
Alongside being able to set up practically everything, clean up afterwards, and cater to guests in all sorts of ways, he was also made to be able to just... hit the town and stroll down to his destination instead of being directly shipped to or brought there. Imagine being some little kid watching this giant spider thing stroll down the street.
Hold on to that visual, actually, because that brings me to why he considers Japan his home rather than just his... place of origin.
So his bouncer mode. It actually wasn't experimental but rather a very often-used mode of his since I imagine he's attended many weddings were someone has had to be... forcibly escorted out. But what the problem is with it is that during that mode, he is essentially given no restrictions on what he can do and has just been activating it so he can go against orders.
He's big, but he's travelling on hand, hulking around a big bag of supplies on the way, it may take a while for him to get from headquarters to his destination, maybe even days. But what his creators don't know is that he's been taking detours and entire days off to bond with civilians that have been fascinated by him, originally just children marvelling him, but he grew closer to them and becoming much more like a weird uncle to them, growing a bond with a rural community to the point even their families know of him and see him as a friend, and it's this bond that starts to bring problems.
DJMM starts to demand things that robots don't really get to demand, like days off and privacy, which concerns the company as for why he'd even need that. He starts committing outright fraud to insert legally insert himself into society and starts taking tips or some of the profit to spend for himself. He starts tearing out/ sabotaging GPS systems, or disabling microphones so they can't figure out where he's been going or what he's saying. It gets to the point where he outright threatens employees' lives and keeps some hostage to force them into allowing him to do what he wants.
The arms race between DJMM and his creators comes to a close when his creators decide to sell him off to Fazbear entertainment, sieging him and choking him of his battery life before doing a factory reset and sending him off, finally getting rid of him (also voiding Fazbear's warranty on him if his bouncer mode is ever activated again)
While he was able to secretly save his memories, it's not much use now that he's in a whole new country. He's still figuring out how to reconnect with the kids he practically watched grow up but he's also still getting up to trouble in America. we stan a dude who commits... all of this
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His design is, now that i realize it, very much inspired by Moguro from the Laughing Salesman. Also he's got the fun eye liquid swirlies from DJMM's Beta design
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which, speaking of DJMM's weird design elements. ✨weird things i've noticed about DJMM's design✨
Weird long hole things in the sides of him??? I've seen NO-ONE talk about this
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Those aren't speakers. I thought they were, too, for the longest time, but while staring at his ass for a particularly long time I realized that A. They don't have the texture of his other speakers and B. They go in?
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Second, he has a gummy smile. It's not shown a lot since i guess his default position is just an agape mouth but in the rare occassion he clicks his teethplates together, or this one Particular render, he's got gums for days
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also what the freak, anytime i try to look up a specific facial feature for reference im always finding procedures for removing it!! i'm sick of it!! it popped up when i was looking up cleft chins for Music Man and it popped up for gummy smiles! we can't have SHIT in his household!! goddamn!!!
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gorillaxyz · 5 months ago
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I’m actually obsessed with how you refer to Nixon’s cheeks as his “jowls” it’s so funny to me. I’m gonna do that with fdr and his dewlap from now on
- Mr. B
jowl is a beautiful word to me and well i love them deeply... his jowls are special and important... i was thinking about them a lot today actually
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look at that thang
dewlaps are also awesome in my opinion argh... thank you for the ask mr b
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biracy · 1 year ago
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Cannot find my older post about it (tbh I didn't try very hard) but honestly I am so tired of people trying to pretend like there's any sort of consistency to "cis women getting a nose job is evil and NOT feminist. However all transsexual surgery is Holy Holy Holy". It's truly not surprising how often people end up reblogging from like, actual tradcaths about "modern women ruining their natural feminine beauty" or whatever. I've said this all before so I don't wanna repeat myself but obviously this does not mean "you cannot critique what drives people (cis or trans) to get 'plastic surgery'" or "women's choices exist in a vacuum" (although I would roll back some of the extreme performative hatred for women who make The Bad Not Feminist Choices), but it DOES mean "stop pretending like there's any sort of actual distinction between Cis Plastic Surgery (bad) and Trans 'Gender-Affirming' Surgery (good) that does not fully rely on the medicalization of being transgender" and it ALSO means "stop pretending to care about bodily autonomy when what you really mean is 'people can do things with their bodies I think are cool and good, but not things that I don't like. Those things should literally be banned, that's how we will save women'"
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diamondintherioux · 7 months ago
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5/4/24
2 months post op
What a mind fuck. 2 months post op. Tomorrow is my last day of physical therapy. I finally have my arm mobility restored! I even went back to Pilates the other day, I’m so sore but it’s a good sore. I have 3 more lymphatic drainage massages left then I’m done. TBH I don’t think they’ve really don’t anything for me post op. They’re important that first week to get the tumescent fluid out but if you are at your goal weight and barely swelled I don’t think it makes that big of difference. In the same breath I fit better into my faja than I did 2 weeks ago but I think that’s the vaser lipo working.
I have been lazy with my vitamins (what else is new?) it’s just I have too many. I start Invisalign on Tuesday so I’m hoping that’ll be the kick start to my 30 days no sugar. I just need a detox from it. Had ice cream today from a local place I used to be obsessed with and it just didn’t taste the same. It’s sad but I swear I don’t have those sugar cravings anymore. They used to be so intense that I would leave the house in the middle of the night to buy something sweet. Now I have a homemade chocolate covered banana slice and I’m good.
It’s so crazy looking at old photos and seeing how my natural body could never become my post surgical body. No amount of gym could give my body an hourglass figure. People get so mad that others can just pay for a perfect body lol
I need to call a medspa and start scheduling facial treatments. I need a chemical peel and a facial. Since I’m not longer spending money on physical therapy and massages I can focus on my face. I want to get spray tans as well but I can’t stand the transfer. What is the solution? I’m so pasty, specially my legs.
I stopped wearing shape wear under my faja and I feel soooooooo much better. I swear shape wear snatches you better than a faja. I don’t see myself spending $200+ on a faja ever again. Amazon has some really good ones if I need an extra unf underneath my body con dresses (yes that’s allllll I’m wearing this summer).
3 months post op I’ll be out of town. That’s when I’ll start wearing the faja for 12 hours. Probably only at night. I’ll be updating monthly from now on. I’m thinking about making a post about ab boards and foams for educational purposes.
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thedisablednaturalist · 1 year ago
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Insurance so help me god if you deny me this doctor putting a balloon up my nose I'm going to go evil gnome mode
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