Thanks for that Johnathan.
I agree that lab investigations are not indicated in a situation where
most sane people would want to have the implants removed - the
question being "who is going to pay for it?"
However, this is by no means a new issue: leakage of silicon and
consequent sensitisation is not confined to subjects with the poor
quality implants that have recently been in the news. Sometimes women
are referred with a variety of health problems and are unaware that
silicon sensitisation is the root cause - hence the need for a lab
test.
Nick Miller
London
On 10/01/2012, Jonathan Kay <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> DH Letter to Professionals:
> http://www.dh.gov.uk/health/2012/01/pip-breast-implants-letters-to-professionals/
>
> DH Interim Report from the Expert Group:
> http://www.dh.gov.uk/health/2012/01/pip-implants-interim-report/
> Annex E of this contains the clinical guidance. It does include looking for
> evidence of rupture. In the main body of the report it says "... some
> ruptures – perhaps as many as 2 in 3 – do not result in clinical signs or
> symptoms, and can only be detected by scanning or by explantation (removal).
> " The report does not mention laboratory investigations.
>
> Jonathan
>
> On 9 Jan 2012, at 14:55, Sarah Mapplebeck wrote:
>
>> I've had a phone call from one of our local GPs. Several patients have
>> turned up asking for their blood tests as they have PIP implants. Surgeons
>> are sending patients to their GPs who don't know what to do.
>>
>> Are we meant to measure silcone in these patients and if so, any ideas on
>> the laboratory providing this? What are others doing?
>>
>> Thanks, Sarah
>>
>
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