It figures that the very week that a cab driver asks if anyone has ever told me that I look like Camilla Parker Bowles and a reader advises a facelift is in order, I also should be writing about cosmetic surgery, albeit one gone wrong in the worst way.
(The cab driver had an Eastern European accent, and he called her Camille, but he quickly extinguished my faint hope that I was misunderstanding him when he saw my confusion and added helpfully, “Wife of Prince Charles?”)
The case I was covering was the tail end of a very long hearing at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.
At issue is the conduct of a family doctor-turned-cosmetic surgeon, Behnaz Yazdanfar, whose patients and lawyer call her Dr. Yaz, who is charged with professional misconduct and incompetence in connection with the death of Krista Stryland (and with other cases that were reviewed in an investigation by the college).
Ms. Stryland was a 32-year-old Toronto real-estate agent, from her pictures a gorgeous young woman, not overweight at all, but wanting to get rid of the stubborn bulges that plague some women. On Sept. 20, 2007, she went in for liposuction, the removal of fat tissue using an instrument called a cannula, which is attached to a suction system.
I sat in for closing arguments in the case, which is now in the hands of the disciplinary panel. I’ll leave aside the particulars involving Dr. Yaz, but some of the related general information was honestly shocking.
One of the prosecution’s chief expert witnesses was a famous Toronto plastic surgeon named Stephen Mulholland, who by the sounds of it made a compelling and remarkably forthright witness.
Liposuction, he said, is “perceived by the lay public, it is perceived by physicians that aren’t involved in the … acute management of sick patients as perhaps the easiest of aesthetic procedures.”
But in fact, he said, “it is also the number one cause of death from cosmetic surgery in North America. It is fraught with complications.”
What happens in liposuction is basically this: The cannula instrument (which another doctor who testified says may be “passed” through the body 20,000 times in a single abdominal procedure) inevitably traumatizes normal tissue. Intravascular fluid, which we need to pump blood through our systems, leaks into what’s called the third space, between the cells and the vascular tree, and accumulates there.
All this shifting about of fluid may leave insufficient amounts to feed the vital organs; liposuction, Dr. Mulholland said, is the only aesthetic surgical procedure that may cause massive large volume shifts into the third space.
As he put it once, “It’s a very, very large space, into which your tiny little circulating volume of five litres [the normal human adult blood volume] can evaporate very quickly.”
It is a serious business, the opposite of the happy-face adverts, with their come-hither promises, which fuel the widespread perception that lipo is a benign procedure.
Since the sort of fluid shifts that happen in liposuction are comparable to those that occur in a burn resuscitation or major trauma, the logical question, since the latter two are emergency procedures and the former elective, voluntarily taken on, is why would anyone do it?
The answer is that ours is a society obsessed with looks and youth. No news there.
Cosmetic surgery is a booming business. (And men are hardly immune. A review by the college of some of Dr. Yaz’s cases, for example, showed that of 24 patients, six were men, including one fellow who had two significant large-volume liposuctions within a month.) Women go in to get rid of “muffin tops” or “bra lines,” men for their “love handles” or over-developed breasts. People have bellies, legs, arms, backs and necks liposuctioned. Some combine a lipo with tummy tucks or breast augmentations, which only elevates the risk.
