Breast Surgery
Tuberous Breast Correction
Specialized correction for a constricted, tubular breast shape — releasing the restriction and restoring a normal contour.
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Releasing the restriction, restoring a normal shape
Tuberous breast deformity is a developmental condition where the breast doesn’t fully develop along its base, leading to a characteristic narrow, constricted shape. Features can include a narrow breast base, herniation of tissue into the areola (making the areolas look puffy or swollen), a higher-than-normal inframammary fold, significant asymmetry between breasts, and smaller overall volume.
It’s more common than many patients realize — and most patients have lived with it believing it was simply “how their breasts look.” Correction is technically nuanced: it requires both releasing the constriction and adding volume and shape in a coordinated way. This isn’t augmentation with a different name — it’s a distinct operation.
Tuberous breast correction is specialized work — but for the right patient, it changes how they relate to their own body.
Who This Procedure Is For
- Patients with a constricted, narrow-based breast shape that dates from puberty rather than from later changes.
- Patients with puffy or herniated areolas, where breast tissue pushes forward into the areola.
- Patients with significant asymmetry between breasts from developmental differences.
- Patients who’ve felt self-conscious about breast shape since development and want a normal-looking contour.
- Patients in good general health, non-smokers, with realistic expectations about what correction can achieve given starting anatomy.
How It’s Performed
Releasing the constriction
The restricted tissue at the base of the breast is carefully released — through strategic internal scoring and tissue rearrangement — to allow the breast to expand into a normal shape. This is the technical core of the operation and what distinguishes tuberous correction from standard augmentation. Without this release, simply adding an implant tends to produce an unnatural, “snoopy” shape where the implant sits separately from the constricted breast tissue.
Restoring volume and shape
Augmentation is almost always part of the correction, using implants sized to the individual anatomy. In some cases, fat transfer may be used alongside or instead of implants to soften transitions and fill specific areas. The goal is a breast that looks normally developed — not just “bigger.”
Addressing the areola
Herniated or puffy areolas are typically corrected with a periareolar technique that reduces the diameter of the areola and flattens the puffy appearance. This addresses one of the most visible features of the deformity and is done at the same time as the release and augmentation.
Staged vs. single operation
Severe cases or significant asymmetry may benefit from a two-stage approach — for example, a tissue expander first to gradually stretch the skin envelope, then a final implant and refinement at a second operation. Dr. Arredondo discusses what’s realistic for your anatomy rather than forcing everything into one operation when staging would produce a better result.
What to Expect After Surgery
Things to Consider
- More complex than standard augmentation. Tuberous correction carries a higher revision rate because the starting anatomy is constrained and results depend on how the tissue responds to release.
- Results depend heavily on severity. Mild deformity corrects beautifully in a single operation; severe cases may need staging and still show some residual features.
- Scars vary by technique. Areolar-based incisions are common, and when used, scars sit along the pigment border where they typically fade well.
- Staged approaches may serve you better. For severe asymmetry or very tight tissue, a two-stage plan often produces a more natural result than forcing a single operation.
- Future pregnancy and breastfeeding can affect results — as with any breast procedure, subsequent changes to the breast can alter the correction.
Frequently Asked
Common features include a narrow, constricted base, a higher-than-normal inframammary fold, puffy or herniated areolas, and significant asymmetry. A consultation and exam clarify this quickly — many patients come in unaware the condition has a name or that it’s correctable.
No. Augmentation adds volume to an already normal breast envelope. Tuberous correction requires releasing constricted tissue and adding volume in a coordinated way. The operations overlap in some steps but the technical demands and outcomes are different.
Yes, in almost every case. The puffy or herniated areola appearance is addressed simultaneously with a periareolar technique that reduces areolar diameter and flattens the contour. It’s almost always part of the same operation rather than a separate step.
Symmetry improvement is a major goal, but perfect symmetry is rare in breasts generally — and especially in tuberous anatomy, where the two sides often start quite different from each other. Significant improvement is the realistic expectation; a perfect match is not guaranteed.
In many cases, yes. Severe deformity or significant asymmetry may benefit from a staged approach — first a tissue expander or initial correction, then a final adjustment at a second operation. Dr. Arredondo discusses honestly which approach serves your anatomy best rather than defaulting to a single operation for every patient.
Often Considered Together
Breast Augmentation
For patients with a normal breast envelope seeking volume. Shares some steps with tuberous correction but is a simpler operation.
Learn moreBreast Lift (Mastopexy)
For patients whose primary concern is sagging rather than developmental shape issues.
Learn moreFat Transfer to Breast
Sometimes used alongside implant-based correction to soften transitions and fill specific areas of tuberous anatomy.
Learn moreSchedule a Consultation
Every plan starts with a conversation about what you’re hoping for — and an honest discussion of what’s realistic for you.
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