Silicone Breast Implants to Beat Out Saline?
Well, it's official. The FDA has finally lifted their almost 14 year ban on silicone breast implants which had resulted after overwhelming health complaints from women who had this implant device.
Now, the FDA is backing the return of the infamously more natural feeling and looking breast implant, and two lucky manufacturers seem to have the corner on the market right now.
A company called Inamed is currently one the sole producers of this supposedly newer and safer implant device for women who get breast implants, with the original manufacturer, Dow Corning, now a defunct company after being inundated with litigation over the silicone implant, having to file bankruptcy. The other manufacturer to gain FDA approval to start almost immediately marketing their implant was Mentor Corp.
So why now has the FDA decided to lift this ban with only a few restrictions on the silicone implant? Well, although they have met with a lot of resistance from consumer advocacy groups who say the device is nowhere near proven to again be safe, the FDA has agreed to pretty much widely offer the silicone option again.
The only restrictions will be that the person opting for silicone over saline must be at least 22 years of age, which is when experts agree the breast has fully matured on a woman, and there are no restrictions at all if the surgery in reconstructive in nature.
Reconstructive breast implant surgery may be due to a cancer that resulted in removal or partial removal of a breast, or other circumstances where the breasts are seriously deformed or maimed.
Many analysts believe that this new, almost carte blanche approval of the silicone breast implant will lead to the eventual takeover of saline implants, the only currently approved breast implant on the market.
They believe this to be true because many women have actually requested to have the silicone implants, and most women want a more natural feel to their breast implants and look than the saline breast implant can currently offer in their eyes.
The silicone offers a more natural look because it is a gel-like substance which actually mimics the look of real breast tissue fairly well, and "moves" more like a real breast than saline does.
They also are reported to drop more naturally and lay more naturally than a saline implant does. Not only that, but women with silicone breast implants report that both they and their partners think the silicone implant feels natural.
But at what cost? Many silicone-implanted women complained of health issues and complications, and there was an alarmingly high rupture rate on these implants, which led to lawsuits and FDA complaints, and ultimately led to the 14 year ban.
The interesting part here though is that years of research were conducted to see if silicone breast implants had any medical correlation to the reported health issues, which ranged from lupus and cancer, to autoimmune diseases and other complications that could not even be pinpointed.
<< Home