A dangerous cosmetic surgery killed 14 women in five years
This story was produced as part of a larger project led by Maria Alesia Sosa and Érika Carrillo, participants in the 2018 National Fellowship.
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Three days earlier, Adianet Galván González, 30, had undergone fat transfer buttock surgery, popularly known as Brazilian Butt Lift (BBL), at the New Life Surgery center, located on Miami's 8th Street.
Orlando Llorente, the doctor who operated it, assured González that her daughter would be fine. But his hopes vanished when he was confirmed at the Kendall Regional Hospital that Adianet was brain dead and that only the decision to disconnect her was to be made.
Galván's surgery was on June 4, 2018, but it was not until seven months after her mother received the report from the Miami-Dade medical examiner that she confirmed something she already suspected: Adianet died as a result of the surgery. The report, which he gave exclusively to Univision , cites as cause of death, "complications in liposuction and in the procedure of fat transfer from his own body."
The autopsy notes that the woman had two perforated veins, where fat could enter and then traveled to the lung and brain, causing at least one thrombus, and causing brain death.
According to this research, in the last five years, 14 women have died after undergoing cosmetic surgeries in South Florida. Ten died after a fat transfer in the buttocks, and Galvan is one of them.
Univision asked to speak with Orlando Llorente, the certified surgeon who operated Galván, but he did not accept an interview. The owner of the place accused the forensic doctors of inventing the result of the autopsy.
"I never imagined that something like this could happen in the US. If it had happened in Cuba, but here with so much technology, here everything is perfect. I never thought that my daughter was going to come and die in this country, "says González, who arrived from Cuba three years ago."
What González and Galván ignored is that, far from being perfect, the laws in the state of Florida do not protect people who undergo this type of surgery, and the lack of regulations promotes the proliferation of these centers, which have multiplied in recent years.
The most dangerous surgery
Arelys González says that she went with her daughter to the first appointment in 'New Life Surgery'. They arrived there because a friend of the family had operated there and everything had gone well. Remember that they were treated kindly, they were quickly given details of the procedure, and they even offered a promotion so that the mother would also be operated.
"They made her sign some papers, but they never asked her if she spoke English, and they never told her about the risks," says González, who acknowledges that neither she nor her daughter conducted an exhaustive search of the doctor, the center or the type of operation.
The popularity of the Brazilian Butt Lift (BBL) or lifting of the buttocks by fat transfer has skyrocketed in recent years. According to the American Association of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), between 2012 and 2017 the number of procedures across the country increased by 135%.
This association has also warned about the dangers of this procedure, which they consider 20 times more risk than any other cosmetic surgery.
Dr. Pat Pazmiño, president of the Association of Plastic Surgeons of Miami, assures that these women die for a specific technique that they have identified, and that some continue to practice right and left, especially in Florida.
"There is a more dangerous surgery than all the others, the Brazilian Butt Lift, and here in Miami more people have died than in any other part of the country," Pazmiño explains.
The technique involves removing fat from an area of the body, to pass it to the buttocks area. The danger, he says, is when the person doing the surgery drills a vein under the muscle, causing the fat to enter the blood vessels and travel to vital organs such as the brain, lung or heart, causing thrombi that kill patients. as it happened to Adianet Galván.
Legal Limbo
For Pazmiño the problem begins with the law and medical professionals. "This happens because there are doctors who use dangerous techniques and do not understand anatomy, because they are not plastic surgeons." In the case of Galván, the doctor who operated it was a certified plastic surgeon.
Florida law allows a family doctor or any specialty practice such delicate surgeries as a liposuction or BBL.
To be certified as a plastic surgeon in the US, a person must complete a medical degree at the university, then must practice in surgery for 6 to 8 years, and then submit two exams.
"In many cases, the doctors who perform cosmetic procedures go to a course for a weekend and begin to operate," warns Pazmiño.
This factor could have weighed on the death of Kizzy London in 2017, a woman of 40 years, who traveled from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to become a BBL in the center 'Jolie Plastic Surgery', one of the best known and largest in Miami .
Arnaldo Valls, the doctor who operated on London, had only taken a three-day course to do liposuction and another one on fat-transfer gluteal augmentation , according to the Florida Department of Health (FDOH), which took 8 days to complete. months in restricting the license. Valls is forbidden to do that technique, but continues practicing others in the center Jolie, who did not have any sanctions for the death of London.
Attorney Jesus Novo, representing 'Jolie Plastic Surgery' told Univision that they have 11 surgeons accredited by the Florida Board of Medicine and FDOH.