So the real issue in fat removal is not how much aspirate volume (or CC's) you have, but how much actual fat is in it and exactly from where it is removed. In patients with ultrasound-assisted or laser-assisted liposuction, this is really difficult to figure out as the fluid comes out as a slurry (almost like a Slurpee drink). These technologies blend the fat with whatever water is present.
Dr D's practice does not fabricate volumes. The surgeon does not put in extra infiltrate to make your aspirate seem larger. The amount of fat removed in a liposuction case is not the most important issue anyway. It is the configuration of the fat left behind.This is the factor that makes things look natural when all the healing is done and the swelling has subsided.
You want a thin even pad of fat between your skin and the deeper tissues. This minimizes streaking and skin irregularities common in practices looking to get you that really large number. You also don't want so much fat removed that your skin sags (if you can avoid it). This should limit your desire for additional surgery.
Be very careful in asking for more liposuction in areas previously treated. People are not "fat bottles." If you go beyond that which is advisable, you can make the skin look really terrible...."ripply" is a term commonly used to describe it.
People are designed differently. They have differing amounts of fat in different areas. Comparing "CC's removed" with all we have said is really not going to help you figure out the quality of your liposuction treatment. Liposuction is quality not quantity. :)
© John Di Saia MD
... an Orange County California Plastic Surgeon
Serving Southern California since 1997 * (949) 369-5932