The hero of this story is the candidate who came to me for surgery, a flower girl who got a malignant tumor after breast implants. What happened? Listen to her story together today The age of 20s should be the best days of life, when I first saw her, beautiful face, slim figure, a beautiful woman. “I did breast implant 6 years ago, now I feel the hand feel fake, the form is also fake, I do not want to have this burden now, can I take it out for my own fat. I want to be a real self” Of course, you can, take the prosthesis autologous fat breast augmentation with the same take the same to do my personal from 04 years, for the operation of the technical aspects of the experience is relatively more, to see her body fat base is not bad, after a conversation, the initial development of the surgical program. I took fat from her thighs to replace her original prosthesis. Originally close to the period of surgery, but did come the girl’s bad news After communicating with the assistant, she told her current condition, malignant tumors come very suddenly. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma can start in the primary lymph nodes or in primary extranodal lesions. More than 50% of patients have extranodal lesion invasion at diagnosis. The most common extranodal lesions are the gastrointestinal tract and bone marrow, each accounting for 15 to 20% of patients. Any organ can be involved and a diagnostic biopsy is necessary. For example, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the pancreas has a much better prognosis than pancreatic cancer, but without a biopsy opportunities will be missed. Primary diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the brain has increased in incidence in recent years. This scene is déjà vu, as foreign media outlets have reported on T-cell lymphomas caused by breast implant encapsulation. “I can think of at least three ways to end my life,” said Stacey Boone, a U.S. patient who underwent breast implantation. “First it was bone metastases, and now it’s in the liver, and the liver is just about to stop.” According to Ms. Boone, doctors determined that the breast implant had caused the cancer, and that the cancer she had was not breast cancer, but what should be called breast implant-associated interstitial large-cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL) The main symptoms include fluid buildup around the implant, lumps, and sclerosis. “Symptoms develop a few years after implant surgery.” Oncologist Frederick Locke said. “The FDA claims to have documented at least 359 cases, with nine deaths. They’ve investigated whether the type of prosthesis correlates with the development of lymphoma, and the results were that there was no difference in incidence between the two types of prostheses, silicone and saline.” And now, time like this is quietly happening to people we come in contact with on a daily basis. Breast implants causing cancer is no longer a myth. It is quietly happening in every corner of the world, but it does go unnoticed. This young girl’s condition made her stop her plan to take breast implants and autologous fat to augment her breasts, she needed to be healthy, so she had to undergo chemotherapy in the oncology hospital. The past six months, six courses of treatment, the condition has not seen any improvement. But the girl is very optimistic still actively treating. I hope she is getting better and better. To do a breast implant friends a piece of advice: do chest examination every year, so that for the chest what lesions can be known in time, and then implants do about 10 years need to be replaced in a timely manner, do not arbitrarily placed regardless of, there is no once-and-for-all implant, even if your implant is imported. There is no one-size-fits-all implant, even if your implant is imported. The implant can be filled with fat at the same time it is removed, so if you want to have a real and soft breast again, and you don’t want to accept a shriveled breast after the implant is removed, you can have it removed at the same time.