Beyond The Knife:
The Life and Death of Imperfections
By: Danielle Jackson
Issue date: 11/26/07 Section: Nation/World
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The latest victim to this tyranny is Dr. Donda West, award-winning recording artist Kanye West's mother. Donda West, 58, died allegedly from complications of cosmetic surgery. It was later revealed that her plastic surgeon, Dr. Ian Adams allegedly could be at fault in the death of Ms. West because of past patients of Adams who were not satisfied with the results of their surgery.
According to MTV.com, a civil action brought by an Orange County woman is still pending against Adams. The woman alleges that, in 2006, she was hospitalized with a high fever and fluid in her left breast, following a botched surgery to remove excess skin and reshape her chest and abdomen. Two other cases against Adams also remain active.
Those facts aside, the speculation remains, when can one who desires plastic surgery feel safe in going under the knife? Ms. West placed her trust in Adams, who has been featured on Oprah and The Discovery Channel during his plastic surgeon career, but is it enough to entrust a surgeon predominately because of his publicity and television appearances?
According to Dr. Andrew Jacono MD, a Dual Board Certified Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon and Founder of the New York Center For Facial Plastic and Laser Surgery, the first step in ensuring a safely executed procedure is that the patient is healthy enough to withstand the physical stress of anesthesia and surgery on the heart and pulmonary or lung systems. This check, according to Jacono, requires a complete medical pre-operative evaluation, performed by an internal medicine doctor, not a surgeon, including complete blood work, an electrocardiogram, and chest x-ray. This step is most important in the case of Ms. West because there was speculation that when she originally went to have the procedure done, the surgeon refused her because of a medical condition discovered during pre-op.









