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Cassileth Plastic Surgery

Case #1297 · Laguna Beach, California

Direct-to-Implant Reconstruction

Dr. Lisa Cassileth · Founder, Cassileth Plastic Surgery
Before
After
Before · FrontAfter · Front

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Additional views

Oblique
Case 1297 — Oblique before
Before — Oblique
Case 1297 — Oblique after
After — Oblique
Side
Case 1297 — Side before
Before — Side
Case 1297 — Side after
After — Side

This 40-year-old patient from Laguna Beach, California was diagnosed with high risk breast cancer. She underwent bilateral mastectomies and Dr. Cassileth performed one-stage breast reconstruction using 310cc silicone implants and acellular dermal matrix for added support.

Continued care

Recommended aftercare, skincare, and MedSpa services for Direct-to-Implant Reconstruction.

Aftercare protocol
  • Lymphatic drainage massage starting week 2
  • Compression garment for 4–6 weeks
  • Scar management protocol at 3 weeks
  • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy to raise tissue oxygen and support skin and incision healing, particularly with prior radiation or a compromised blood supply
Skincare
  • SkinCeuticals C E Ferulic for scar healing
  • Medical-grade silicone sheeting
  • SPF 50+ on incision sites
MedSpa services
  • Laser or microneedling for scar refinement after 3 months
  • LED light therapy to accelerate healing
  • Indiba radiofrequency for tissue recovery
Specific to this case
  • Aftercare

    Extended hyperbaric oxygen course (10–15 sessions) to support bilateral healing.

    Bilateral procedures heal more reliably with sustained HBOT.

  • Coordination

    Follow-up imaging schedule coordinated with the oncology team.

    Post-mastectomy patients stay on a long-term surveillance pathway.

  • Aftercare

    Lymphatic drainage prioritized at week 1 to limit post-axillary swelling.

    Lymphatic disruption from axillary work makes early drainage more valuable.

Why this approach

The decisions that shaped this surgical plan.

  • Reconstruction planned around the oncologic mastectomy, surgical timing, tissue preservation, and incision pattern were chosen to support both safe cancer clearance and long-term aesthetic outcome.
  • Bilateral direct-to-implant performed in one operative session so symmetry, tissue handling, and final shape track between both sides.

Pre-op preparation

What to do before surgery. Specific to this case.

  • Stop NSAIDs, aspirin, and high-dose fish oil two weeks before surgery; the surgical team provides a full medication list at the pre-op visit.
  • Nicotine in any form, cigarettes, vapes, patches, gum, paused six weeks before and six weeks after surgery. Nicotine narrows blood vessels and slows wound healing.
  • No overhead clothing for 3 weeks. Stock front-zip tops, supportive sports bras (post-clearance), and the drain pouches we provide.
  • A driver is required the day of surgery and a responsible adult should stay with you the first 24 hours.
  • Surgical date confirmed against oncology pathway. Imaging and pathology results are reconciled by the team at the pre-op visit.

Recovery timeline

Milestones specific to this case. Individual recovery varies.

  1. Day 1–7

    First week prioritizes drain care, walking short distances, and avoiding any overhead reaching. Multi-modal pain control keeps narcotic use brief.

  2. Week 2

    Activity ramps up cautiously: longer walks, no lifting yet. Most patients return to desk work this week.

  3. Week 4

    Return to most low-impact activity. Scar massage, compression, and skincare protocols pick up.

  4. Week 6

    Standard clearance milestone. Patients return to most exercise, gym work, and sleeping in any position.

  5. Month 3

    Coordinated oncology and surgical check-in. Reconstruction shape and feel begin to mature.

  6. Month 6

    Mature result. Patients commonly schedule the final phase of staged reconstruction here.

“Reconstructing the breasts at the same time as mastectomy eliminates the risks of multiple surgeries and, more importantly, helps minimize the sense of loss.”

Dr. Lisa Cassileth

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