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Body brokers leave trail of questions, corruption

This is the second installment of a four-part series.

 In April 2003, Robert Ambrosino murdered his ex-fiancée – a 22-year-old aspiring actress – by shooting her in the face with a .45-caliber pistol.

Then Ambrosino turned the gun around and killed himself.

Soon after, Ambrosino’s corpse entered the United States’ vast tissue-donation system, his skin, bones and other body parts destined for use in the manufacture of cutting-edge medical products.

But before they entered the system, Michael Mastromarino, owner of a New Jersey-based tissue recovery firm, needed to solve a couple of problems.

He didn’t want to have to report that Ambrosino had perished in a murder-suicide. And he didn’t want anyone to know that Ambrosino’s family hadn’t given permission for his body to be used for tissue donation.

Mastromarino solved both problems the same way: He lied.

He claimed Ambrosino died in a car accident. And he claimed that Ambrosino’s family had agreed to donate his tissue before the rest of his remains were cremated.

Mastromarino was the leader of a now-infamous human tissue trafficking ring that fed an international trade in body parts. along with tissues from Ambrosino’s corpse, he stole parts from grandmothers, electrical engineers, and factory workers, as well as from the remains of famed journalist Alistair Cooke.

The disgraced dental surgeon from Brooklyn supplied the raw material for products used for a host of surgical operations – from knee repair to plastic surgery and cosmetic implants. He was a ground-level player in an industry that makes its profits by harvesting human tissues mostly from the United States, but also from Slovakia, Estonia, Mexico, and other countries around the world. One of Mastromarino’s top buyers was Florida-headquartered RTI Biologics, a processor of American, Canadian and Ukrainian body parts that trades among the high-tech companies on the NASDAQ stock exchange.

Years after Mastromarino was sent to prison and the publicity in his case quieted down, his story has been given new life by a lawsuit filed in a Staten Island courthouse. New York Supreme Court Judge Joseph J. Maltese has given the green light for RTI to stand trial Oct. 22 in a civil case that will delve into what the company knew – or should have known – about Mastromarino’s body snatching.

Evidence already filed in court raises questions about whether RTI was simply a victim of Mastromarino’s fraud, or whether it eschewed common sense in favor of its bottom line. An investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) shows that the evidence in the case – and in other body-stealing scandals across the globe – also raises larger questions about the conduct of an industry that recycles more than 30,000 human bodies each year.

Police in places including Hungary and Ukraine, and North Carolina and Alabama in the U.S., have alleged that tissue suppliers stole tissue, committed fraud and forgery, or took kickbacks to pad their pockets. These cases suggest that Michael Mastromarino wasn’t the only body wrangler who has bent or broken the rules in the drive to supply the industry with flesh and bone.

A fantastic product

Mastromarino, now 49, is doing time at a maximum-security prison outside Buffalo, N.Y., serving a sentence of up to 58 years. He describes himself more as a human tissue broker than a body thief.

“This is an industry. It’s a commodity. Like flour on the commodity exchange. It’s no different,” Mastromarino said. “I cut some corners. but I knew where I could cut corners. we were providing a fantastic product.”

For more than three years until his crimes came to light in late 2005, Mastromarino’s firm supplied bones and other tissue to RTI’s nonprofit subsidiary, RTI Donor Services, and four other U.S. companies.

Mastromarino was familiar with RTI’s operation from his previous career as one of the busiest dental surgeons in Manhattan. He regularly used products derived from cadaver bone on his patients and, in that capacity, he had signed a consultancy agreement with the company in 2000 to help further refine RTI’s products.

But Mastromarino’s personal life was falling apart. He started injecting prescription painkillers to sooth an old football injury, became an addict and got busted for drug possession. He tried rehab three times before giving up his medical license.

Familiar with the industry and good with a scalpel, Mastromarino opened his own human tissue recovery company. He called it Biomedical Tissue Services.

The process was easy. Mastromarino filled out a form downloaded from the website of the Food and Drug Administration, the agency that regulates the industry in the U.S.

He didn’t have to wait for the FDA to inspect his facilities. He began supplying body parts right away – with more than a little help, he said, from an industry leader, RTI Donor Services.

 “RTI set me up,” Mastromarino testified in a pending civil case. “They then said, ‘Listen, we can get into your business, we can get you started, we can open up your own business.’”

‘Santa’s naughty list’

The parties signed a supply contract in March 2002.

Not long after, Mastromarino’s colorful language and short fuse led to complaints from RTI staff. there were also rumors about his alleged involvement with organized crime, according to testimony of Caroline Hartill, RTI Donor Services’ vice president of quality assurance.

Michael Mastromarino, serving a sentence of up to 58 years, describes himself as a human tissue broker rather than a body thief. Photo: ICIJ

Court documents outline that RTI executives were concerned enough to hire a lawyer to run a background check on their new business partner.

“The good doctor has been on Santa’s naughty list for quite some time,” the lawyer, Jerome Hoffman, wrote in December 2002. “I would strongly encourage you not to do business with someone that has this kind of resume.”

A few weeks later Hoffman further urged RTI to give Mastromarino “the required 60 days notice under the current contract and not sign a new contract.”

RTI didn’t heed the lawyer’s advice.

Instead, on Feb. 11, 2003, Caroline Hartill signed an amended contract with Mastromarino’s firm.

In the new contract, his name was replaced with a freshly licensed doctor who lived in another state and with whom Hartill had never spoken. the doctor served as the medical director of Mastromarino’s firm – according to the signature on paper at least.

Hartill testified in the pending civil case that the amended agreement was simply a routine part of accreditation with the American Association of Tissue Banks, an industry body that oversees some of the biggest tissue banks in the U.S. she said her company wanted the medical director to take Mastromarino’s place on the contract because RTI determined it “would like to have more direct interaction with some of the other key principles [sic].”

RTI discounted the law firm’s concerns, she said, because if Mastromarino had “turned his life around, then who was I to pass judgment on him?”

Mastromarino recalls events differently. He testified Hartill and another RTI executive called him confidentially. they worried about competitors discovering his background and using it against the company, they said. And that’s why, Mastromarino said, his name came off the contract.

“Okay, whatever you guys want to do to make it comfortable,” Mastromarino told them, according to a deposition he gave in the current civil case.

The company refused interview requests from ICIJ and did not respond to detailed questions provided more than a month before publication.

RTI turns to corpse wranglers for a simple reason: it needs dead bodies to turn a profit.

“We cannot be sure that the supply of human tissue will continue to be available at current levels or will be sufficient to meet our needs,” RTI warned stockholders in securities filings. “We expect that our revenues would decline in proportion to any decline in tissue supply.”  

And it isn’t alone.

More than 2,500 companies registered with the U.S. government rely to varying degrees on the fees they charge for crafting implants made from human tissue.

The world’s largest human-tissue bank, Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation, took in nearly $400 million in revenues in 2010.

MTF is set up as a tax-exempt nonprofit, like most organizations that recover the tissue from donors located through hospitals, funeral homes and morgues. Most recovery outfits supply processing companies like RTI, which clean the pieces and mill them into usable implants. the processing companies in turn distribute them directly to hospitals or use an outside vendor such as medical device giant Zimmer to ship them around the world.

Players bid for exclusive access to U.S. donors. For example, medical device company Bacterin announced last year that it “successfully secured rights of first refusal of human tissue with multiple recovery agencies.”

Competition has spawned bitter court battles. MTF sued Bacterin last year for hiring former employees who, the lawsuit alleged, used their inside knowledge to pitch a rival bone product to MTF customers. “The very foundation of MTF’s business is under direct attack,” MTF argued in its complaint.

Publically traded NuVasive sued MTF and its partner Orthofix, accusing it of infringing on a patent for stem cell-laced bone implants. And nonprofit LifeNet Health sued Zimmer over reimbursement fees for processing bone plugs.

RTI gets tissue directly through its nonprofit subsidiary, RTI Donor Services, and has also obtained tissue from other nonprofit tissue banks in at least 23 states.

The Alabama Organ Center is one of RTI’s suppliers. it was embroiled in scandal this spring when its second-in-command, Richard Alan Hicks, pleaded guilty to accepting kickbacks from a funeral home in exchange for tissue recovery contracts.

“There are too many loopholes. there are too many temptations. There’s too much money out there,” Hicks’ attorney Richard Jaffe told ICIJ in June. “This industry is out of control.”

The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio has also recovered tissue for RTI. Its contract includes a fee chart – attaching different prices to the same tissue based on the donor’s age. RTI reimburses the recovery bank $1,755 for a 20-year-old femur; but $553 for the same bone from an 80-year-old.

In 1984 Congress passed the National Organ Transplant Act, making it illegal to buy and sell human organs and other human tissues. but it allowed charging “reasonable” fees for recovering, cleaning and distributing those parts.

Younger tissue is stronger and can be more lucrative for tissue processors because it can be used for higher-value grafts. neither RTI nor the University of Texas responded to repeated requests for clarification about why the same tissues would carry such varying fees.

ICIJ turned to Christina Strong, a lawyer for organ procurement organizations (OPO) and tissue banks including tissue giant MTF. ICIJ asked whether there could be any reason other than the quality of the tissue itself for a bank to pay more for younger tissue.

“I have not found a satisfactory answer that makes me like this,” she said, pointing to the contract. “I do not like this. I would say to my OPO, ‘Don’t sign that.’ “

Strictly confidential

With so much competition for American cadavers, some companies seek raw material overseas. That’s created a fertile market in Eastern Europe for body brokers and other middlemen who can help supply the tissue trade.

One of the middlemen was Igor Aleschenko, a Russian coroner working in Ukraine. In coordination with Ukraine’s ministry of health, he launched BioImplant, a state-owned tissue procurement center to supply Tutogen, a German medical products company.

Bioimplant supplied Tutogen with tissue. but Tutogen executives raised internal questions as early as 2001 about whether it should pull out of Ukraine, according to an internal memo marked “Strictly Confidential!!!!”

Aleschenko was asking for more and more money to play the role of intermediary between the regional satellite morgues around Ukraine and Tutogen in Germany.

“The flow of money is difficult to track,” the memo read. “Direct control over our resources is impossible.”

Staying in Ukraine would be high-risk, the authors determined.

“We can’t control the activities of the middlemen, and commitments are not being honored,” the memo said.

But the relationship did not stop.

The courtyard outside NIK1 morgue in Ukraine, which was registered in the U.S. as a tissue bank. Photo: Konstantin Chernichkin/Kyiv Post Over time, 25 Ukrainian morgues registered with the FDA, each listing Tutogen’s German phone number on its registration forms. Since 2002, BioImplant and Tutogen have collectively exported to the United States 1,307 shipments of tissue – mostly bone, skin and fascia sent from Germany.

Families in Kiev first began complaining to police in 2005 that a morgue that was supplying Tutogen’s needs was taking tissue without proper consent. the criminal case was closed after an initial investigation.  Prosecutors determined that, under Ukrainian law, they couldn’t prove a crime had been committed if they couldn’t prove that the tissue had been transplanted into someone, court records show.

Three years later Ukrainian police investigated another Tutogen supplier – this time in central Krivoy Rog. those charges were dropped after the director of the morgue died while the jury deliberated in his criminal trial. then in February of this year, police raided the Nikolaev morgue in southern Ukraine.

Some families claimed they were tricked, pressured or threatened into consenting. Police said in some cases signatures had been forged.

Aleschenko has reportedly slipped out of Ukraine for his native Russia. the Ministry will not respond to questions about his whereabouts.

Roman Hitchev, the founder of a major Bulgarian tissue bank and now president-elect of the European Association of Tissue Banks, said he was invited to Ukraine a few years ago at the request of the regional government in Odessa. Officials wanted to operate a bank similar to that of Tutogen suppliers in Kiev. Hitchev said he left, unconvinced.

“They didn’t have legal infrastructure, laws. Regulations were insufficient,” he said. “There was too much vagueness, too much uncertainty concerning who’s responsible in terms of control, traceability. I don’t like what I saw, and I just walked away.”

The market for fresh bodies in former Soviet republics was alluring enough that even Michael Mastromarino – the New York dental surgeon turned body broker – tried to get in on the action.

He had connections in Kyrgyzstan. He flew there to meet with a top prison official. the official wined and dined him, Mastromarino said, and promised to sell him the bodies of executed inmates. 

Mastromarino went home, energized at the prospects for new supply and revenue streams. He asked the FDA about importing tissue from the country.

The FDA was concerned about the risk that tissues harvested from Kyrgyzstan might carry Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a fatal neurological disease akin to mad Cow disease.

It gave Mastromarino an answer he didn’t want to hear: “No.”

So he had to be satisfied with his domestic sources of bodies. For a time, that was fine. Business was good, and he managed to avoid too much scrutiny from his buyers or regulators.

During audits of Mastromarino’s company by the FDA and RTI, no one tried to verify whether consents obtained from donors’ families were legitimate. Consents were often marked as having been taken by phone. U.S. law requires telephone consents be recorded, but no one double-checked to see if he was actually recording the telephone consents – or even getting them at all.

A Pennsylvania grand jury later condemned the entire inspection process. “If the lies in the records claimed compliance with regulations, that apparently was sufficient,” its 2007 findings read.

Even as Mastromarino’s company was passing inspections and booking profits, outsiders raised concerns about his business practices. Maryann Carroll, director of the New Jersey association of funeral directors, complained to RTI that Mastromarino was approaching funeral homes using RTI letterhead.

“Maryann feels like this reimbursement is excessive and looks like he’s buying donors,” an RTI employee wrote executives, according to undated correspondence detailed in court records. “She claims that if the press gets ahold of this story and slams the donation, then RTI will be dragged into this and her association will state that this is the second time that we were notified and did nothing.”

RTI’s nonprofit Donor Services unit signed a new contract with Mastromarino in June 2005.

RTI didn’t know at the time it signed the new contact, the company later said, that criminal investigators had begun looking into Mastromarino’s operations.

RTI wasn’t the only big company wanting to do business with Mastromarino.

In August 2005, LifeCell Corporation, a provider of skin grafts for burns, plastic surgery and bladder slings among other procedures, invited Mastromarino to its headquarters in New Jersey. it told him it could pay close to $10,000 per body if he could supply the skin from at least 400 donors a year, according to a copy of the presentation. That could have been worth millions of dollars a year to Mastromarino.

Two weeks after making its pitch, LifeCell received a letter from the Brooklyn District Attorney. Police in New York had been investigating Mastromarino’s body-stealing ring for months, after discovering forged consent forms at a Brooklyn funeral home. the DA asked LifeCell to forward any information it had relating to Mastromarino’s firm.

LifeCell did not respond to specific questions posed by ICIJ. In a statement the company said “It was LifeCell’s extensive donor review process that detected irregularities with Biomedical Tissue Services consent documents in September 2005.”

On Sept. 28 – three weeks after prosecutors asked for LifeCell’s records – Dr. Michael Bauer was clearing donor charts for LifeCell. He had always handled the donors provided by Mastromarino’s firm. but he had never tried to independently verify information. He was unaware, he later said, of the ongoing police investigation, but that night something made him do what he’d never done before. He tried calling the number for one of the physicians listed in a donor file.

He got a pizza parlor instead.

In the scandal that followed, LifeCell, RTI, Tutogen, Lost Mountain Tissue Bank and Central Texas Blood and Tissue recalled a total of 25,000 products – 2,000 of which had been sold overseas to Australia, South Korea, Turkey, Switzerland and other countries.

Live fast, die early

An x-ray of an exhumed body stripped of body parts with PVC pipe in place of leg bones.Mastromarino’s case brought a spate of bad publicity to the industry. the unwelcome attention flared up again in August 2006, when a similar case broke in North Carolina.

Phillip Guyett had been working in the tissue industry for more than a decade, starting in California, then branching out to Nevada and, eventually, North Carolina.

Along the way, Guyett discovered that the best way to find young, healthy corpses was by trolling county morgues and funeral homes in lower-income locales with high crime rates, or by targeting cities like Las Vegas, where young people act stupid and die early.

Like Mastromarino, Guyett smoothed the process of selling off body parts with creative record keeping. He forged information on donor files, in one case selling hepatitis-infected tissue with a clean vial of blood from a different corpse.

“It’s ridiculous. I should never have been able to start a recovery business,” he told ICIJ in a recent interview in prison.

“I submitted the form online and in three days I was an official recovery tissue bank registered with the FDA,” he says is a book written about his career. “It’s harder to sell a hot dog on the street than it was to recover transplant tissue.”

Guyett pleaded guilty to three counts of fraud and is serving eight years in a federal prison.

The Mastromarino and Guyett cases prompted U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, to push legislation to help rein in the tissue-processing industry. the proposal would have required that new tissue banks meet minimum standards and undergo regular inspections by the FDA. it would also have required the federal government to define “reasonable” fees – a change companies tell shareholders could endanger future revenue.

His bill died because of hard lobbying by the industry, Schumer said. “They said it wasn’t needed. they said that ‘Everything is under control,’ but I had real doubts,” he recalled. “The bottom line here is, what we saw happen in the Brooklyn funeral home could well be happening in lots of other places both here and abroad, and there’s no real protection.”

“Nothing is going to change,” he said. “There are too many people making too much money.”

Pointing the finger

After pleading guilty to avoid a possible 8,673-year prison sentence at trial, Mastromarino told prosecutors that his buyers – RTI, Tutogen and LifeCell – were not simple victims of his crimes. “Just look at how it works,” he told them.  

Prosecutors said they didn’t find evidence to corroborate his claims. but families of the desecrated dead are now pressing civil charges accusing RTI of negligence – “not so much exactly what they knew, but what they should have known,” plaintiffs’ lawyers explained to the judge during the lawsuit’s pre-trial combat.

If the case does make it to trial, as scheduled, in October, Mastromarino’s story is expected to be a centerpiece of the plaintiffs’ evidence.

Important enough to the plaintiffs’ case, in fact, that lawyers for RTI Biologics fought to have his testimony thrown out. Mastromarino had already pleaded guilty to defrauding RTI and Tutogen, attorney Nancy Ledy-Gurren told Judge Maltese. He can’t turn around and point the finger at them now, she said.

Judge Maltese disagreed.

“You basically want to muzzle Mastromarino from saying anything that involves what your clients said to him – that dialogue that raises the specter of ‘What did they know and when did they know it?’” the judge told the company’s lawyers during hearings last fall.

In the judge’s view, just because the district attorney never prosecuted the executives from the bigger companies doesn’t necessarily mean they didn’t “participate in an enterprise.”

At the least, the judge said, the victims’ families have a right to argue: “They should have known. I mean, how could they be so naive?” 

This story was co-reported by National Public Radio (USA).

TOMORROW: Traceability Elusive in Global Trade of Human Parts; Abusing the ‘Gift’ of Tissue Donation 

Contributors to this story: Thomas Maier and Mar Cabra

About this project:

Skin And Bone: the shadowy Trade In Human Body Parts is an eight-month project by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a global network of reporters who collaborate on in-depth investigative stories that cross national boundaries

ICIJ found the business of recycling dead humans has grown so large over the past decade that you can buy stock in publicly traded companies that rely on corpses for their raw materials. 

Skin and bones donated by relatives of the dead are turned into everything from bladder slings to surgical screws to material used in dentistry or plastic surgery.

Distributors of the merchandise can be found in much of the world. Some are subsidiaries of billion-dollar multinational medical corporations.

ICIJ discovered that patients aren’t always told that the product they are getting originated from a corpse. this led to a more complex issue – how does the industry source the raw material it uses in its products?

Inquiries were conducted across 11 countries and the project was co-researched with National Public Radio and Newsday (USA), the Kiev Post (Ukraine), The Daily Slovakia (Slovakia) and La Voce della Repubblica Ceca (Czech Republic).

The ICIJ’s investigation relied on more than 200 interviews with industry insiders, government officials, surgeons, lawyers, ethicists and convicted felons, as well as thousands of court documents, regulatory reports, criminal investigation findings, corporate records and internal company memos. 

ICIJ also conducted analysis on registered tissue banks, imports, inspections, adverse events, and deviation reports filed with the Food and Drug Administration, the US agency that polices the trade.  ICIJ obtained the data through records requests to the FDA.

Palantir donated the use of software and assisted reporters in analyzing and visualizing data, as well as provided interactive and still graphics for ICIJ and partner publications. 

The project was unveiled at the Google Ideas INFO Summit.

The Team

Kate Willson (USA) Vlad Lavrov (Ukraine), Martina Keller (Germany), Thomas Maier (USA), Mar Cabra (Spain), Nari Kim (South Korea), William Venuti and Antonio Aldo Papaleo (Slovakia), Alexenia Dimitrova (Bulgaria), Michael Hudson (USA), and reporters from National Public Radio (USA).

ICIJ Director: Gerard Ryle

ICIJ Data Editor: David Donald

ICIJ Digital Editor: Kimberley Porteous

Sign up to our email newsletter to receive the “Skin and Bones” ebook.Follow ICIJ on Facebook and Twitter.

Body brokers leave trail of questions, corruption

Barbara Walters Reports on Plastic Surgery

Naples, Florida (PRWEB) April 25, 2012

Kent V. Hasen, M.D. of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery of Naples says “The Cutting Edge,” a recent 20/20 special on plastic surgery, helped make the public aware of new advancements in cosmetic surgery. Dr. Hasen specializes in several of the procedures that were discussed, including breast augmentation in Naples.

The special, which included interviews by Barbara Walters, took an in-depth look at plastic surgery and the newest innovations for minimally invasive techniques.

“The recent 20/20 special examined how improvements in surgical techniques have shortened recovery times for a number of procedures,” Dr. Hasen says. “Patients who have a face lift at my Naples practice are often surprised to see how I can create beautiful and natural-looking results without the need for an extended recovery period.”

The TV show also addressed how innovations in non-surgical treatments, such as fillers and laser-assisted procedures, are affecting demand for more traditional cosmetic surgeries.

“Non-surgical treatments help patients postpone surgery or enhance the results of a recent procedure, but people frequently discover that they can’t achieve the same results as they could with surgery,” Dr. Hasen says. “I often explain to my patients that treatments such as BOTOX® Cosmetic can help to reduce the appearance of aging, but more dramatic results will require a surgical procedure such as a brow lift.”

Dr. Hasen offers a full range of surgical and non-surgical procedures for people with a wide variety of cosmetic goals.

“With options such as CoolSculpting® and tummy tuck available in Naples, it’s important that people seek experienced advice from a qualified surgeon,” Dr. Hasen says. “There are benefits and drawbacks to every cosmetic procedure, so it’s important that people have all of the facts before committing to a treatment.

“I’m happy to see that more people are taking notice of the advancements in cosmetic surgery, and I plan on continuing to offer the most effective procedures for my patients.”

Kent V. Hasen, M.D., (http://www.drhasen.com) is a Naples, Florida, plastic surgeon and the medical director of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery of Naples, a full-service cosmetic practice that has developed a strong reputation in South Florida since opening its doors in 2002. a graduate of Cornell University in New York, Dr. Hasen is certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery. he received several prestigious awards for presentation of clinical research during a 7-year residency at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. in addition to offering medical spa services and cosmetic surgery for the face, breast and body, Dr. Hasen is an active member of The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Barbara Walters Reports on Plastic Surgery

Where to find the Right Cosmetic surgeon For Ones chest Enlargement Surgery 

The cost to a plastic surgery certainly is the main factor that others intending plastic surgery in Houston the slashed consider. You will have to carefully pick a board-certified cosmetic surgeon. In reality, most those people confess that they can were demoralized from taking with the a surgical operation procedure by your price rates. Consider your alternatives. since we connect to people consistently, it is certainly natural for individuals to maintain our appearance to better influence in the same manner others could perceive all of us. the rewards are generally worthwhile, while. this is why facial a surgical operation is a very big trade, regularly nurtured by several people.

reason is that it is in an essential accident. As an important resource just for clearly recognized and reliable specifics of procedures, the ASPS will help you further investigate a special procedure along with information you may rely relating to. As medical related technology is constantly on the improve, new procedures are increasingly being introduced. More often than not these operations will use the latest and additionally cutting-edge engineering that help in reducing restoration times, functioning times, and additionally incision shapes.

Added wise noted expert Perry Sweeney, “Lots of individuals jump into a surgical operation without appearing financially geared up, leaving these people in heavy debt following on from the procedure.”

This fast relationship individuals maintain along with patients aids them feature total and secure and efficient treatment, including thorough post-operative care to attenuate risk with any side-effects. Customized solution plans helps make the advanced plastic cosmetic surgery procedures work appropriate for the initial aesthetic demands and vigorous conditions with patients. With pretty much everything care proposed by the plastic-type surgeon’s medical clinic, you will safely find a makeover – simply make all those mornings prior to the mirror fantastic.

No matter the fact that world views virtually any cosmetic approach, even when it is for an important dire medical related necessity, you’ll possess the assurance you made the ideal decision all things considered – an important wise, educated determination and place yourself from the expert hands to a qualified medical professionsal. Dr. although your complete procedure isn’t really designed we are able to those desirable six-pack stomach muscles, it can provide smooth level tummy without dangling pores and skin.

Mastectomy certainly is the partial or simply complete removal or possibly a chest or simply both chests as well as being usually conducted to busts cancer affected individuals to decrease the spread within the cancerous panels.

Compensation just for victims of plastic cosmetic surgery malpractice consist of payment just for medical charges, corrective operations, and diminished income. therefore, this kind of procedure isn’t an progress of features as well as helps to ones self-esteem.

Two Probabilities of a Cosmetic plastic surgery Tax.

Where to find the Right Cosmetic surgeon For Ones chest Enlargement Surgery 

Syneron’s elure Advanced Skin Lightening(TM) Products Become Leading Solution for Hyperpigmentation

LINCOLNSHIRE, Ill., Feb. 9, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –Board Certified Dermatologist, Dr. Amy Forman Taub, a leading, nationally recognized expert in anti-aging products, treatments and technology, announces the availability of elure Advanced Skin Lightening Products at her practice, Advanced Dermatology in Lincolnshire, Illinois.

we all commit sun sins–from applying too little sunscreen to forgetting to reapply when you’re on the beach. Today, those mistakes may be emerging as sun spots and uneven discoloration which can make you look a decade older than you are! That’s why Dr. Taub, one of the nation’s most sought-after dermatologists, now carries the new elure(TM) Advanced Skin Lightening system in her private practice, Advanced Dermatology, Skinfo Specialty Skincare Boutique and on skinfo.com, her professional skincare website.

Dr. Taub carefully evaluates each new treatment that she offers at her practice and only treats her patients with the most efficacious and cutting-edge therapies available today. That’s why she has made elure available to her patients. elure is the only clinically proven, topical skin lightening product that contains Melanozyme(TM), an enzyme derived from a tree mushroom, which effectively dissolves the dark-colored pigment in skin. It’s also the winner of the 2011 best of Beauty award by Allure magazine in their Big Breakthrough Category.

Why? Current topical skin lighteners may decrease melanin overproduction, but they don’t treat the visible melanin on the skin’s surface. Many contain hydroquinone, a known skin irritator. with other products, improvements are slow to come by and often aggravate skin. elure, on the other hand, is non-irritating, safe, and works within only 28 days.

Patients not only report improvement in tone but texture as well. “elure is one of my go-to skin care regimens for my patients. It’s safe, fast-acting, and works on skin tones one to five. Plus, these are products that live up to their promise, which is a lighter, more even skin tone,” says Dr. Taub.

the elure system consists of:

elure Advanced Facial Wash lathers into a rich and creamy foam that removes dirt and dead skin cells. ($35)

elure Advanced Skin Lightening Lotion: Melanozyme(TM) brightens, softens, and soothes skin morning and night. ($150)

elure Advanced Skin Lightening Night Cream: Also with Melanozyme(TM) to brighten and provide a mega dose of hydration. ($150)

elure is available only from dermatologists, plastic surgeons, and other aesthetic providers, as well as skinfo.com. Visit elureskin.com

Dr. Amy Forman Taub practices at:Advanced Dermatology 275 Parkway DriveSuite 521Lincolnshire, IL 60069847-282-4047advdermatology.com

About Dr. Taub: Dr. Amy Forman Taub, MD, is a board-certified dermatologist who founded Advanced Dermatology and Skinfo® Specialty Skincare Boutique. Advanced Dermatology is a state-of-the-art medical and cosmetic dermatology practice nationally recognized for excellence in dermatologic care. Dr. Taub is currently an assistant clinical professor at Northwestern University Medical School. She also educates and trains physicians from all over the country to provide cosmetic and laser procedures. Dr. Taub is a member of the American Academy of Dermatology, American Society for Dermatologic Surgery, among others.

SOURCE Advanced Dermatology

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. all rights reserved

Syneron’s elure Advanced Skin Lightening(TM) Products Become Leading Solution for Hyperpigmentation

Otoplasty – Ear Surgery Makes the Whole Face Look Stronger

Our face is made of a number of different elements working together. each is individually essential, but none of them can create a look on their own. Often the most overlooked and undervalued features of our face are the ears.

A misshapen or mis-sized ear can greatly affect the look and functioning of the ears, which will in turn affect how the whole face looks and moves. but, you don’t need to worry. There is hope. A form of ear plastic surgery, otoplasty, can help give you new ears that fit into the whole.

Earlier, the procedure involved making a small incision near the ears (depending upon the type of operation needed). After the doctor makes the incision, excess skin or cartilage can be loped off or reconfigured to meet the specific needs of the patients. recently, plastic surgeons have begun to perform new and cutting edge incision-less ear restructuring surgeries.

What the doctor uses in these surgeries is a small needle that can poke through the skin. it should also be able to manually mold the cartilage. during reconstruction, the doctor can also reposition the ear on the face, creating a different structure. each method of otoplasty is different, but the general results can be the same. Talk with your doctor to decide which kind of procedure is right for you.

Typically, otoplasty involve reducing, creating, or restructuring the cartilage or skin. while doctors may sometimes opt to focus on one type of restructuring, more often it involves some combination of these different elements. This can be done to repair an injury, correct a long-standing genetic defect, or to create a sense of symmetry between mismatched ears, depending on your needs.

As with any surgical method, there are risks associated with otoplasty. However, the risks are relatively minimal, especially compared with the vast changes such a successful procedure can bring into your lives. to reduce the severity and number of these risks, it’s important to do extensive research and find a qualified, experienced plastic surgeon to perform your plastic surgery.

The surgeon will check your overall health condition. Based on the results of this examination, he will suggest you to go for a particular type of otoplasty that will suit you the best. during your consultation with the surgeon, you should not hesitate to reveal the exact details of your health condition. you should also discuss with him openly your expectations about the procedure.

Even though it is good to have a high level of expectation, you should be realistic about the results. it is true that an ear surgery can completely change your attitude to life. at the same time, there are limits to what the surgery can achieve. your surgeon will allay your concerns and will give you a good picture of what to expect after the surgery.

Otoplasty – Ear Surgery Makes the Whole Face Look Stronger

Rosemont Media Begins 2011 with 45th Baker Gordon Symposium

The 45th annual Baker Gordon Educational Symposium for aesthetic surgery will be taking place in Miami, FL from February 10-12, and aesthetic healthcare search engine marketing firm Rosemont Media will be there.

Rosemont Media will be in attendance at the 45th Annual Baker Gordon Educational Symposium to be held in Miami, FL this February 10-12, 2011. As an expert in search engine marketing for plastic surgeons, Rosemont Media CEO Keith Humes says he always looks forward to the Baker Gordon Symposium because it gives him a chance to interact with some of the most well-known doctors in the plastic surgery community, a number of which also happen to prescribe to the successful brand of plastic surgery website design and online advertising created by Rosemont Media.

This year’s Baker Gordon Symposium will focus on the transformational effects of volume addition in plastic surgery. Humes says he believes participation in industry events that focus on the road ahead, and attract the top plastic surgeons from around the world is essential to the continued success of Rosemont Media’s partnership with the aesthetic healthcare industry.

According to Humes, the 2011 Baker Gordon Symposium is just the beginning to a year filled with aesthetic healthcare industry events as they continue to pursue the cutting-edge in search engine marketing and medical website design. following the Baker Gordon Symposium, Rosemont Media will travel to the 28th Annual Rhinoplasty Symposium in Dallas from March 4-6, 2011, where Humes will give a presentation entitled “Search Engine Marketing: Social Media and Beyond.”

Rosemont Media will return home for spring break and the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) Symposium in San Diego from March 25-29, 2011, then hit the road again for the Aesthetic Meeting 2011 in Boston from may 6-10, which is sponsored by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS). During the ASAPS event, Humes will continue his social media series designed specifically for the aesthetic healthcare industry, in addition to taking part in the practice management and marketing event on may 11, 2011. To bring the spring season to a close, the Rosemont Media team will attend the Annual Scientific Session of 2011 hosted by the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry (AACD) in Boston from may 18-21.

Regardless of whether Rosemont Media is focusing on search engine marketing for plastic surgeons, website design and development, or dental and medical Facebook optimization, Humes says the modern ad agency is committed to exceeding client expectations, while developing and investing in the road ahead.

Rosemont Media is the Modern Ad Agency. Led by 13-year search marketing guru, CEO Keith Humes, the firm operates at the nexus of innovative search engine marketing campaigns and custom website design for plastic surgeons, cosmetic dentists, bariatric surgeons, LASIK vision correction specialists and beyond. Rosemont Media works under the strictest terms of exclusivity to ensure optimum online performance and unparalleled brand identity for each practice.

Rosemont Media is located at 1010 Turquoise St. Suite 201 in San Diego, CA 92109, and can be reached at (800) 491-8623. for more information about the custom medical and dental website design, search engine marketing consultancy, and online reputation management services Rosemont Media specializes in, visit www.rosemontmedia.com or the Rosemont Media Facebook page. To learn more about search engine marketing, medical and dental Facebook optimization, and how the latest internet and technology news affects the aesthetic healthcare industry, visit the Rosemont Review.

About the Baker Gordon Educational Symposium

The 45th Annual Baker Gordon Symposium will take place in Miami, FL from February 10-12, 2011. The premier plastic surgery event is jointly sponsored by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) and the University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine. it is also endorsed by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) and the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS). This year’s Baker Gordon Symposium will focus on the emerging trends of plastic surgery, including the combination of surgical contouring and volume addition in procedures such as breast augmentation, facial rejuvenation, and much more.

For more information on the 45th Annual Baker Gordon Symposium, visit bakergordonsymposium.com, or the Rosemont Media aesthetic healthcare search engine marketing blog, the Rosemont Review.

Rosemont Media Begins 2011 with 45th Baker Gordon Symposium

Fox29 WFLX TV, West Palm Beach, Florida-Insta-Face Lift

(WFLX) – Word is just starting to get around about Ulthera. It's a new, cutting-edge cosmetic procedure without any actual cutting.

Its makers promise to improve sagging skin in just 30 minutes: no surgery, no needles and no recovery time.

The question is: does it live up to the hype?

“Until I use it on my patients in my office, I don't really know how well it works,” said plastic surgeon Steve Goldman.

Goldman is the first doctor in northeast Ohio to buy an Ulthera machine and have his staff trained on it, but he has a deal with the company that he can return the equipment if it doesn't live up to expectations.

He's asked three patients to be among the first to try it and give their honest opinion.

“Doing everything I can to stay looking young, have good healthy skin, and not have to have any type of surgery,” said 46-year-old Karen Bassin.

“I was diagnosed in 2000 with malignant melanoma,” said 47-year-old Dana Ashburn. “And I had a tumor the size of a hardball in my leg.” Dana beat that deadly cancer but doesn't ever want to have another surgery.

Sixty-three-year-old Young Cho has never had any cosmetic procedures but wants to try this one. “I want a little tight in my face; that's why.”

Ultherapy works by sending focused ultrasound to the layer of fat under the skin. As that fat heals, it produces collagen and tightens sagging skin.

But with results expected to be subtle, how do you assess them fairly?

In general, when you look at those advertisements that have before and after pictures, you'll see, it says 'unretouched photo'. but it's amazing the difference you can make just by tweaking the lighting a little bit.

It's nearly impossible to get the exact same look, even when you're trying. That's why Dr. Goldman is relying heavily on what his patients see when they look at themselves in the mirror. “The company says three months, 90 days to see the maximum effect. In general, we give about six weeks for most patients to really see their result.”

In comparing the video of the patients' before and after photographs, a great difference is seen.

“I feel much fuller through here and less lines I think. overall, my face just looks fuller which I like,” said one patient.

“Some tightening in here, some tightening in here on either side of my face,” another added.

As for mrs. Cho, a little tightening, but “not much difference”. She does say she feels good to have done something for herself. “Is it worth the money? Yes.”

A word of advice, though, from Karen. Don't believe it if you hear the procedure is painless. “I did it without any pre-medication at all. I would not recommend doing that.”

For Dr. Goldman the jury is still out if this new procedure is worth it. “I mean, for me to be really happy with this device, I want to see a little more result.” 

He says he's going to reserve total judgement until the full 90-days has passed. Dr. Goldman says it will probably be a year before he feels totally confident about what Ulthera can do.

But the more patients who get the therapy, the better he can learn who the best candidates are for this procedure.

Copyright 2011 WFLX. All Rights Reserved.

Fox29 WFLX TV, West Palm Beach, Florida-Insta-Face Lift

Houston Plastic Surgeon Using Tomorrow's Liposuction Procedures Today as Traditional Methods No Longer Only Option

Dr. Sam M. Sukkar, a board-certified plastic surgeon in Houston, TX, is employing innovative, body-slimming liposuction techniques as the procedure increases in popularity. With less-invasive options now available, liposuction has become the most popular choice for aesthetic enhancement for men, and the second most popular for women, according to a 2009 study conducted by the American Society for Plastic Surgery.

(Vocus) August 3, 2010 — at his Houston plastic surgery practice, board-certified plastic surgeon Dr. Sam M. Sukkar is incorporating new liposuction techniques into his repertoire at Sukkar Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. According to a 2009 study conducted by the American Society for Plastic Surgery, liposuction has become the most commonly performed procedure for men, and second most common procedure for women. With the innovative techniques now available, Dr. Sukkar says he is able to offer less-invasive procedures, meaning traditional liposuction methods are no longer the only option.

With increasing popularity for techniques like liposuction in Houston, Dr. Sukkar remains on the cutting edge of aesthetic enhancement by offering procedures like VASER® High Definition Liposuction, and the Zerona® Body Slimming Laser. regardless of his patients’ eventual cosmetic enhancement goals, Dr. Sukkar says he is able to provide them with a number of options to address and satisfy all of their expectations.

High Definition VASER® liposuction in Houston is different from traditional liposuction methods because of its ability to factor in the anatomical structure of the patient’s body, which Dr. Sukkar says helps him create and promote enhanced body contour. As a less invasive procedure than traditional methods, VASER® ultrasound liposuction is one of the most versatile body contouring systems available, evidenced in the fact that over 150,000 procedures have been performed since FDA-approval in 2002.

In addition to VASER® liposuction and procedures such as the tummy tuck in Houston, Dr. Sukkar also offers the Zerona® body slimming laser in Houston. As a non-invasive body slimming method used to eliminate unwanted fat deposits, the Zerona® system is virtually pain-free. because the laser is applied externally without the use of incisions, Dr. Sukkar says his patients are able to remain active during treatment, which is not typically possible with more traditional liposuction methods.

As procedures like liposuction and breast augmentation in Houston continue to advance technologically, the popularity of body sculpting surgeries in the U.S. is likely to continue to increase as well. Dr. Sukkar says he realizes the decision to undergo aesthetic plastic surgery is a significant event in his patients’ lives, which is why he pursues advancing technology in all areas of plastic surgery.

Dr. Sam M. Sukkar earned his medical degree from the Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans. He completed his residency training in general surgery at the University of Texas Hermann Hospital in Houston at the Texas Medical Center. Dr. Sukkar was then awarded the Thomas D. Cronin fellowship in Plastic and Reconstructive surgery, which led him to a residency at the Northwestern University in the Division of Plastic Surgery where he completed his fellowship as a plastic surgeon. Dr. Sukkar has published a number of articles focused on plastic and reconstructive surgery, and regularly attends continuing medical education courses. He is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and is a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, the American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, the Texas Society of Plastic Surgeons, and the Houston Society of Plastic Surgeons. Dr. Sukkar is also affiliated with the Texas Medical Association, and the Houston Society of Plastic Surgery.

Dr. Sukkar and Sukkar Aesthetic Plastic Surgery can be found at 1616 Clear Lake City Blvd., Suite 102, in Houston, TX 77062, and can be reached at (281) 990-8487 or drsukkar.com/

Rosemont MediaLoryn Wilson(800) 491-8623E-mail Information

Houston Plastic Surgeon Using Tomorrow's Liposuction Procedures Today as Traditional Methods No Longer Only Option