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Rights and Liberties

Silicone Breast Implants Face Hearings in Congress

By Molly M. Ginty, Women's eNews. Posted February 17, 2007.


After the FDA lifted a 14-year ban on silicone breast implants many women are weighing the devices' potential side effects.
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Cheryl Henley loves her second set of breasts.

After developing breast cancer in 1988, she had a bilateral mastectomy and had her surgeon insert two silicone implants before the devices were banned amid health concerns in 1992.

"Now that silicone is available again, I'll likely get it a second time if I need my implants replaced," says Henley, a 62-year-old health administrator in Albany, Ga. "I know there are risks, but I think they're worth it because this type of implant looks and feels so natural."

Since the Food and Drug Administration approved silicone breast implants in November, the questions Henley is considering also face the 365,000 U.S. women who have breast augmentation and the 46,000 who have reconstruction each year.

"When they talk to their doctors about breast surgery, the first thing women want to know is if it's true that silicone is more realistic," says Dr. Walter Erhardt, a spokesperson for the Arlington Heights, Ill.-based American Society of Plastic Surgeons. "Second, they ask, 'Is it safe?'"

The FDA, based in Rockville, Md., has approved silicone implants for reconstruction in women of all ages and for augmentation in those over 22, basing its decision on large-scale studies (including one from the Washington-based Institute of Medicine) that found the implants safe.

Due to the possibility of leakage, the agency recommends checking for ruptures with magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, three years following surgery and every two years after that. Due to concerns about silicone's connection to autoimmune diseases and other health problems, it is also requiring implant manufacturers to track safety and efficacy in 80,000 patients for 10 years.

After the FDA gave silicone a green light in November, the two current U.S. makers -- Allergan, based in Irvine, Calif., and the Mentor Corporation, based in Santa Barbara, Calif. -- saw their stock prices soar, and surgeons were barraged with calls about the new option.

Implant Boom Expected

In the wake of the FDA announcement, Wall Street analysts predicted breast implant sales in the United States would skyrocket, hitting $2 billion by 2012.

"Though many patients are now taking a wait-and-see approach, the number of women having implant surgery could grow," says Erhardt.

So, too, could the controversy. Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, D-Conn., plans to hold congressional hearings on silicone implants later this year. "The FDA's decision is very disturbing given the unproven safety record of these devices," she says, contending the studies used to justify lifting the ban are not convincing.

Some grassroots health groups -- including the Washington-based National Women's Health Network, the Boston-based Our Bodies, Ourselves and the San Francisco-based Breast Cancer Action -- also object.

Health advocates say the FDA is not taking into account silicone implants' high price and possible health problems: joint pain, mental confusion, headaches, rupture (reported in 69 percent of patients in one study) and leakage of silicone outside the breast area (reported in 21 percent of patients in another study).

On top of these concerns come the potential problems of implants in general: scarring, loss of sensation, blurring of breast cancer detection images and difficulty breastfeeding.

Critics point to women like Karen Guerriero, a 39-year-old Houston mother who had breast augmentation at age 21 and learned five years ago that both her silicone implants were leaking, causing dizziness, nausea and blurred vision. "I don't have the money to have them removed," says Guerriero. "I want this poison out of me, and can't sleep at night worrying about it."

Cost a Concern

Cost is another concern. Unless implants are deemed medically necessary, usually only the case with reconstruction after mastectomy, they are not covered by health insurance. Surgery can run $5,000 to $10,000, which covers the $1,800 to $2,000 price of a pair of silicone implants.


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See more stories tagged with: breast implants, silicone

Molly M. Ginty is a freelance writer based in New York.

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raine
Posted by: raine on Feb 17, 2007 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would suggest for anyone skeptical of how dangerous silicone breast implants are, please check the below website. As a user of these awful things in 1980 after a double mastectomy, I can testify that indeed, they cause autoimmune dysfunction and so many other ills. I have had large blobs of the stuff removed from my arms and back
from leakage and ruptures. I was told they were safe and would last me a lifetime. Lies, all lies.
http://www.siliconeholocaust.org/

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Hadashito
Posted by: hadashito on Feb 17, 2007 6:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If little girls (of all ages) wish to spend their money or their parents' to enhance the investment portfolios of the thousands of cosmetic plastic surgeons now exploiting their desires to have nice big sets of breasts and show off (presumably) mouth watering cleavages - - which seem to be the height of feminine fashion these days - - why not let them ? Vanity and stupidity are hardly new phenomena. But then watch the darlings rush back to their cosmetic surgeons when the fad wears off and/or the side effects become apparent. These physicians are not stupid. They know full that there's more money to be made catering to "self image enhancing" routines they are most eager to sell to these bimbos - - of all ages.

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» RE: Hadashito Posted by: dkstwin
How SICK can you get?
Posted by: wireup on Feb 17, 2007 11:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is so SICKENING it is STOMACH TURNING. That women can be so god-damned IDIOTIC and VAIN never ceases to amaze me. What some women will do to make themselves "beautiful" and "desirable" and the "envy of other women" is truly the hight of stupidity!

Are big boobs so important that a woman will voluntarily poison herself and maybe eventually die just so that men will want her and women will envy her? Are women so fucking shallow that they will do this to themselves in such numbers?

I guess they are!

And PLEASE let us not hear once again how some woman with low self-esteem had her whole life changed by having her boobs enlarged with this CRAP! Personally, I don't buy that nonsense for one little second. If a woman has such low self esteem, then she needs to go to work on herself from the inside, NOT from superficial enhancements.

Cosmetic enhancement is ridiculous and only serves the interests of the doctors and cosmetic interests. Companies that pander to this nonsense are laughing all the way to the bank.

I once heard of a woman who underwent this surgery and got bigger boobs. Why? Because her husband loved big boobs. So, why didn't he marry someone with big boobs? In the end, this couple was divorced and the woman was left to fend for herself with this ridiculous surgery. I wonder how many women go through the same thing.

To me, this is just one more thing put upon women to make us into some stupid ideal woman that does not exist except in the fantasies of MEN.

Guys, if you want an ideal woman who conforms to all your fantasies, maybe you should go out and buy one of those inflatable naked dolls. Then you can have all your dreams come true! Because real women don't all have big boobs. Real women do NOT look like PLAYBOY center folds. Real women often pinch more than an inch. That's reality. Live with it. Of course you can try to improve yourself. But if you are to live with any degree of peace and contentment you need to learn to accept yourself as you are, a human being with all the faults.

That goes for the male sex as well. Did anyone ever really look at those muscle-bound guys in the magazines and the gyms? Incomprehensible! Who in their right mind finds that attractive!

It's the same for all. We're all imperfect and no one has the right to demand that we conform to some impossible fantasy of the opposite sex foisted upon us by them and the establishment in order to make a buck!

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I buyed some....
Posted by: Michiganman on Feb 18, 2007 9:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and felt em and they feel reel and i keeps em in my sock drawr and get em out and skweez em and they feel reel, i think.

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» RE: I buyed some....and also Posted by: Michiganman
MISTER B
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Feb 21, 2007 12:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My wife of 38 years died in 1999. She was diagnosed with MS. I know that her death was caused by 20 years of silicone breast implants. There is no way of knowing in advance how your immune system is going to respond to silicone. Go ahead. Roll the dice. See whether it kills you.

My wife told me before she died, "I killed myself."

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For some odd
Posted by: rht79 on Feb 22, 2007 10:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
reason alot of men are weirdly invested in the idea that women hate each other and live to impress each other. They will do anything to believe that this is true. Don't know what that's all about. Personally I really couldn't care less what women think of me as long as I'm getting the males of my choosinng I'm happy. Plus for the poster 'wireup' please don't project your own issues on every female on this planet and I don't really think it's your place to tell anyone how to deal with their self esteem issues. It's just a cosmetic enhancement people. Lighten up.

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