About Cohesive Breast Implants
What are Cohesive Gel Breast Implants?
The standard implant in the United States has been saline filled, ever since the FDA moratorium on silicone gel filled breast
implants in 1992. The type of implants that were available before the ban are available today as part of an "adjunct
study," which is open to patients with congenital deformities or having a revision for particular reasons.
What distinguishes cohesive implants is that the silicone gel is firmer, essentially a soft solid. If a cohesive implant is
cut in half, there is no gross movement of gel, and the implant maintains its shape.
The way these are made is that the company uses more "crosslinker" in the making of the implant. The ingredients are the same,
but with more crosslinker added, it makes the gel firmer.
The term "cohesive" has been bastardized in recent years. Cohesive breast implants implies form stability, or form retention.
That means that in any position, the implant maintains its shape. That is an important distinction, because it means that the shell should
not fold, and that it will maintain a particular shape.
Unfortunately, given the recent media attention to cohesive implants, many are using the term to describe "regular" silicone gel
implants. Technically, they are correct; all silicone gel is cohesive to some degree. But the term cohesive has always meant form stability,
and when patients ask for cohesive gel, it is because they are looking for an implant with those particular characteristics of durability and
shape retention. Hopefully, the terminology will be clarified in the coming years.
More Information about Cohesive Gel Implants
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