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Liposuction: A comprehensive guide to the procedure, benefits, and risks

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1 week agoon
Liposuction, also known as lipoplasty or suction lipectomy, is a surgical procedure designed to remove excess fat from specific areas of the body. It is one of the most popular cosmetic surgical procedures performed worldwide, with over 265,000 procedures performed in the United States alone in 2020, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).
What is liposuction?
Liposuction is a surgical procedure that involves the use of suction to remove excess fat from specific areas of the body, such as the abdomen, hips, thighs, arms, and neck. The procedure is typically performed under general anesthesia or local anesthesia with sedation.
Types of liposuction
There are several types of liposuction procedures, including:
1. Traditional liposuction: This is the most common type of liposuction, which involves the use of a cannula (a hollow tube) to suction out excess fat.
2. Tumescent liposuction: This type of liposuction involves the injection of a solution containing lidocaine and epinephrine into the fatty tissue before suctioning.
3. Ultrasonic-Assisted Liposuction (UAL): This type of liposuction uses ultrasonic energy to liquefy excess fat, making it easier to remove.
4. Laser-Assisted Liposuction (LAL): This type of liposuction uses laser energy to melt excess fat, which is then suctioned out.
5. Radiofrequency-Assisted Liposuction (RFAL): This type of liposuction uses radiofrequency energy to heat and liquefy excess fat.
Benefits of Liposuction
The benefits of liposuction include:
1. Improved body contours: Liposuction can help to create a more balanced and proportionate body shape.
2. Reduced fat: Liposuction can permanently remove excess fat from specific areas of the body.
3. Boosted confidence: Liposuction can help to improve self-esteem and confidence.
4. Long-lasting results: Liposuction results can last for many years, provided that a healthy lifestyle is maintained.
Risks and complications of liposuction
As with any surgical procedure, liposuction carries certain risks and complications, including:
1. Bleeding and haematoma: Excessive bleeding or haematoma (a collection of blood) can occur.
2. Infection: As with any surgical procedure, there is a risk of infection.
3. Scarring: Liposuction can result in scarring, although the scars are usually small and well-hidden.
4. Asymmetry: Liposuction can result in asymmetry, although this is rare.
5. Numbness or loss of sensation: Numbness or loss of sensation can occur in the treated area.
Who is a good candidate for liposuction?
A good candidate for liposuction is someone who:
1. Is in good physical health: Liposuction is a surgical procedure, and it’s essential to be in good physical health.
2. Has realistic expectations: It’s essential to have realistic expectations about the results of liposuction.
3. Has excess fat: Liposuction is designed to remove excess fat, so it’s essential to have excess fat in the area to be treated.
4. Is committed to a healthy lifestyle: Liposuction results can last for many years, provided that a healthy lifestyle is maintained.
What to expect during the recovery period?
The recovery period for liposuction typically lasts several weeks, during which time:
1. Pain and discomfort: Pain and discomfort are common during the recovery period.
2. Swelling and bruising: Swelling and bruising are common during the recovery period.
3. Rest and relaxation: Rest and relaxation are essential during the recovery period.
4. Follow-up appointments: Follow-up appointments with the surgeon are essential to monitor the healing process.
Conclusion
Liposuction is a popular cosmetic surgical procedure designed to remove excess fat from specific areas of the body. While it offers many benefits, including improved body contours and boosted confidence, it also carries certain risks and complications. By understanding the procedure, benefits, and risks of liposuction, individuals can make informed decisions about whether or not to undergo the procedure.
References
1. “Liposuction” by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)
2. “Liposuction: A Review of the Literature” by the Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery
3. “Liposuction: Risks and Complications” by the Mayo Clinic
By Robert Ekow Grommond-Thompson
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Palm nut soup is a Ghanaian dish that can be served with so many foods. It has a rich base of palm nuts combined with tomatoes and various vegetables that makes it very nutritious.
Preparation
Ingredients
– 1 kilogramme of palm nut
– Half kilogramme of beef
-One kilogramme of goat meat
-Three large salmon
-One full tuna
– A handful of turkey berries
-Two large onions
-4 large tomatoes
-3 large garden eggs
– One tin of mackerel
-Ten large peppers
– One large ginger
-2 cloves of garlic
– Four fingers of okro
– Salt to taste
Instructions
-Wash, cook palm nut, turkey berries, and pepper and add salt to it.
-Grind palm nut, turkey berries and pepper with mortar and pestle or mini food processor.
-Wash goat meat, beef, Tuna, salt and put on fire.
– Blend onion, garlic, ginger and tomatoes and pour on the goat meat.
– Add smoked tuna and salmon and okro to the soup.
-Use a spoon or ladle to skim off the surface oil.
-Garnish the soup with the okro or garden eggs as desired.
-Serve with fufu, banku or Omo tuo.

● Increases hydration
● Strengthens bones
● Promotes gut health
● Helps manage blood sugar and weight
● Protects against cancer
● Improves heart health
Source: Healthtips

It is not easy looking for your barber if your hair has overgrown and you look like a bushman. It is even more serious if your moustache has crossed carpet and is seen entering into your nostrils, some straying into your left ear.
The problem is that some of us do not like changing barbers. My barber, for instance, is a very short akupa who often has to stand on his toes to reach the top of my head. But I maintained him because he understands the international shape of my head and gives me the right cut. Moreover, he has promised never to cut my ears.
Although, he has been cutting my hair for the last five years, I still do not know his name. I’ve never asked and he has never told me. It is a business relationship, not a family affair. He comes at certain specified dates, does his job, gets paid and vanishes.
When he was supposed to cut my hair two weeks ago, I waited in vain. Last weekend he didn’t show up either. Was the guy on strike? If he wanted more pay, he could come for a discussion, although I have been paying him better than his colleagues were getting per cut. I could even offer height allowance if he asked for it.
I was quite uncomfortable with the over-growing hair which everyone was reminding me of, so I undertook a search for the missing barber. The possibility was that other barbers would know his house and direct me accordingly. So from barber shop to barber shop I went asking if they had seen the shortest barber in town. No one seemed to know him.
I decided I couldn’t go another week without a cut, so I reluctantly went into the last shop and asked the barber there to do the job. He studied my head, nodded and asked me to sit on a stool outside and wait. He was finishing another person’s hair and then he’d jump on mine.
Soon, he called me in, and I told him I dislike nonsense.
He was stunned. “Massa, have I offended you?” he enquired worriedly. I said no. Then what was the matter? He begged me to explain.
“I don’t like the kind of haircut that would scare my boss,” I said. He laughed. I continued, “I don’t want my boss to see me and start running away; he should give me promotion.” The barber laughed and promised me a fashionable cut.
“I don’t want a fashionable cut. I want it simple according to the shape of my head.”
“Don’t you like Jojo Special? Your girlfriend will dig you. She’ll believe!”
“Just do as I say.”
I was pretty sure the guy was going to mess me up like I had done to some two or three. The Law of Karma. In Legon I told my room-mate, Akotey Anaara, that I was the best barber the breadth of the country. He brought his head platter and I gave him a wonderful design.
The next morning when he went for lectures, everyone including the lecturer asked him whether he was sick. Actually, the cut I gave him made him look like one of those dull-looking mental patients who often escape from the Psychiatric Hospital and were seen directing traffic or getting into some.
Akortey Anaara had to find another guy to shave the damn hair off his skull and it was even worse. He looked like an obrafor (human head-cutter). His girlfriend didn’t recognise him.
Well, when the barber was cutting my hair, I realised that many people were lining up to have theirs cut today too. When I asked him why his customers were so many today, he said they were preparing for Easter and needed ‘wild’ hairdos to impress the girls in the village. It was then that I knew preparations for the Easter were well underway.
In fact, when Easter is approaching and it is amusing to see the seriousness people attach to the celebration, especially when they are travelling from the city to the villages and cottages. The idea is that you must impress rural girls.
Actually some people start saving for well over six months so that preparations for the occasions are not beset with financial bad-weather, monetary El-Nino or back pocket load-shedding.
For the young man, preparations border on having a stylish haircut, a second-hand but colourful camboo, jeans, third-hand pairs of socks, bottle of Kasapreko Gin, singlet, fashionable shirts and some trousers and shorts. The idea is to go and show to the folks that he is not a hopeless person in the city, but a prospering gentleman who must, therefore, be admired and loved by the girls.
Some money is set aside for ‘show,’ that is buying drinks for friends and for inducing young girls for seduction on Easter Sunday under the cover of darkness. Whatever monies that remain is just enough for transportation back to the city. Such monies are never touched because if you do, you’ll remain in the village or be forced to walk back to the city.
It is the preparation made by the women-folk that is even more interesting. The kaba and slit must be of ultra-modern and custom design so that the wearer can look like a vulture which is about to take off. Then the hairdo, the lip-sticks, the full-shoes, whatever. If the typical celebrant is not careful, she would finally look like a crow.
She would be seen in various colours on Easter Sunday during church service, and it is always a sight like to remember.
Some of the areas where Easter is best celebrated are Peki, Kwahu (Okwahu United, Obo Kwahu and all), Tapa Abotoase, some parts of Ashanti and Brong and some cottages in Central, Eastern and Western Regions. You’ll be surprise they never forget the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
With every Easter though, it is the Palm Sunday which matters to some people. The triumphant entry into Jerusalem is of more significance to them than his death and resurrection, because of the ‘palm element.’
Palm Sunday must indeed be marked with the copious drinking of palmwine and if necessary, the eating of fufu and palmnut soup, a ritual they claim is endorsed by the Holy Spirit.
This article was first published on Saturday, April 9, 1999

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