A surgeon is publicizing his patient’s harrowing story of workplace violence in hopes that it will elicit a contribution of supplies from implant manufacturers to offset the cost of reconstructive surgery.
A story published on LATimes.com says Lydia Carranza’s breast implant deflated when she was shot in the chest last year, in an incident that claimed the life of her co-worker and left her with disfiguring scars. When a man opened fire in her office, Lydia was shot twice: “The bullet fragments were millimeters from her heart and her vital organs,” said Dr. Ashkan Ghavami to the LA Times.
According to a firearms expert, the deciding factor between life and death for Lydia may have been the presence of her saline breast implant. Of course, “don’t go getting breast enhancements as a means to deflect a possible incoming bullet,” he adds.
- Read it on the Los Angeles Times


Dr. Cuzalina of Tulsa Surgical Arts, has written many articles on cosmetic surgery. He is also frequently asked to speak at national cosmetic surgery meetings on the topic of simultaneous Breast Lift and Augmentation. What this means for the patient is one less surgery, one less anesthesia fee, and less overall downtime. This blog includes his latest article in Surge Magazine, a quarterly magazine distributed to members of the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery.



