Plastic surgery and psychotherapy in the treatment of 100 psychologically disturbed patients.

Plastic and reconstructive surgery 1991 Vol.88(4) p. 594-608

Edgerton MT, Langman MW, Pruzinsky T

Abstract

This paper reviews the senior author's long-term experience with the surgical-psychiatric treatment of 100 aesthetic surgery patients with significant psychological disturbances. Patients with psychological disturbances of a magnitude generally considered an "absolute contraindication" for surgery were operated on and later assessed to determine the psychological impact of surgery. Patient follow-up averaged 6.2 years (maximum follow-up 25.7 years). Of the 87 patients who underwent operation (7 patients were refused surgery and 6 voluntarily deferred surgery), 82.8 percent had a positive psychological outcome, 13.8 percent experienced "minimal" improvement from surgery, and 3.4 percent were negatively affected by surgery. There were no lawsuits, suicides, or psychotic decompensations. Patients with severe psychological disturbances frequently benefited from combined surgical-psychiatric treatment designed to address the patient's profound sense of deformity. This study suggests that plastic surgeons are "passing up" a significant number of patients who may be helped by combined surgical-psychological intervention.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 surgical-psychiatric scispacy 1
질환 psychotic decompensations scispacy 1
질환 87 patients scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1
기타 Patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Adult; Face; Female; Humans; Male; Mental Disorders; Self Concept; Surgery, Plastic