Quote from: Ethedon on April 10, 2014, 11:40:54 PM
Without me saying his name you knew exactly who I was referring to and I don't think that's a good thing. I'm getting double incision. But I was hoping he could apply the pedical technique. But he probably won't.
Yes I'm a Dr Garramone patient. I'm very happy with my decision, and I think he did a really nice job. The office staff treated me very well and he was polite and efficient. He is VERY focused which is a good trait in a surgeon. I have had lots of guys here who really admire what an awesome job he did. I had very little trauma (pain and so on) and healed really well which is partly his skill as a surgeon (and also my general good health). I also found him very calming in situations where you might think you'd have a lot of dysphoria (the times I had to show my chest) and he was calming in that I was afraid of surgery.
I would say you gave some tips as to who it was (awesome results, nice staff, polite, etc). It's easy to guess actually. I can see why people would think of Dr G as rude. I do NOT consider him rude at all, but he is very business like and can snap from joking and social to business like in a half second. I just consider that this is who he is. But I was never treated in anything but a professional way. He answered all my questions and when I asked him something he wasn't familiar with he answered in a really interesting way. I just think he is not a particularly social kind of guy. He doesn't really like that aspect of being a surgeon. But if you aren't comfortable with that, well there are many other surgeons.
He won't do the pedicle technique because he *doesn't* do it, it wouldn't be anything personal. He doesn't know how to do it, and choses not to learn it. If you want the pedicle technique you need to find someone who specializes in that technique. Surgery techniques aren't something that you can sort of discuss with a doctor and get them to do, it's not a thing like that. He also is kind of old-school, drains and so on. I think if it works, he isn't fixing it. I don't consider it a personal decision. It wouldn't have anything to do with being "more trouble". That's kind of irrelevant. If you don't know how to, say, cast a fly, it's not "more trouble" to do it, it's "you aren't able to do it".
There are very good surgeons who do the pedicle technique because they want to do it.
If you *really* want the pedicle technique, it might be worth losing your $500. But if you are just worried that he might be rude to you, then I think it's kind of a lot of money to lose for something that it isn't what everybody experiences anyway. But that would just be my opinion on it.
This link has surgeons who perform this technique (not too many actually), not sure how old this link is:
http://www.topsurgery.net/procedures/inverted-t-anchor-top-surgery.htm--Jay