Sunday, September 20, 2020

THE LATEST BRAZILIAN BUTT-LIFT DEATH

Brazilian butt-lift surgery kills again in Miami, despite stricter medical regulation


By David Ovalle


Miami Herald

September 17, 2020


Gia Romualdo-Rodriguez traveled from New York to Miami for surgery at Xiluet, a clinic that specializes in breast enhancements, tummy tucks and Brazilian butt lifts.

 

But during surgery this week, her oxygen levels and heart rate plunged. Unable to save her, the surgeon called 911. Romualdo-Rodriguez was rushed to Kendall Regional Hospital, according to Miami-Dade police, but it was too late.

 

She died at age 46. The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner’s Office said Thursday that Romualdo-Rodriguez’s death has been ruled accidental — the result of an embolism caused by fat injected into her buttocks.

 

The case was the latest Brazilian butt-lift death in Miami, which draws women and men from across the country willing to risk the oft-dangerous surgery for bigger and rounder buttocks. At least 20 people have died in Florida in the past decade because of complications from the procedure, almost all of them in Miami, according to one researcher who tracks the deaths.

 

Fatalities involved in the popular procedure have happened so frequently that the Florida Board of Medicine last year set new restrictions for surgeons. The rule prohibits surgeons from injecting fat into or below a patient’s gluteal muscles because of the risk of piercing the gluteal vein, which can cause fat clots to travel to the heart and lungs, leading those organs to fail.

 

During a Brazilian butt lift, surgeons remove fat from a patient’s stomach using liposuction. The fat is treated and then grafted to the buttocks by injection. The rule adopted by the Board of Medicine requires doctors to inject the fat above the muscle and below the skin. 

 

Still, at least three fat-clot deaths have happened since the rule went into effect, said Miami Dr. Onelio Garcia, a plastic surgeon who helps medical examiners on these cases.

 

“We have sent out all kinds of notifications to plastic surgeons about what they need to do stay safe — more importantly, what they shouldn’t do,” said Garcia, a member of the Florida Society of Plastic Surgeons, which pushed for the rule.

 

The surgeon in this case was Dr. Stephanie Stover, of Xiluet Plastic Surgery on the 8300 block of Southwest Eighth Street. An employee at the office told a reporter Thursday that she was not available for comment.

 

Still, at least three fat-clot deaths have happened since the rule went into effect, said Miami Dr. Onelio Garcia, a plastic surgeon who helps medical examiners on these cases.

 

“We have sent out all kinds of notifications to plastic surgeons about what they need to do stay safe — more importantly, what they shouldn’t do,” said Garcia, a member of the Florida Society of Plastic Surgeons, which pushed for the rule.

 

The surgeon in this case was Dr. Stephanie Stover, of Xiluet Plastic Surgery on the 8300 block of Southwest Eighth Street. An employee at the office told a reporter Thursday that she was not available for comment.

 

According to her public profile on Florida’s Department of Health, she does not have any history of discipline and is certified with the American Board of Plastic Surgery.

 

Romualdo-Rodriguez, of College Point, New York, was transitioning to become a woman. According to police, she was also undergoing breast-enhancement surgery.

 

Florida’s Society of Plastic Surgery cautions against doing too much surgery at once.

 

“Make sure, as a patient, you research your surgeon and your facility and make sure you do not try to do too much on any one visit,” said Chris Nuland, an attorney with the society.

 

Friends described Romualdo-Rodriguez as well-known in New York City’s transgender community, working with outreach groups such as Make the Road New York and Colectivo Intercultural Transgrediendo.

 

Romualdo-Rodriguez hailed from Mexico but lived in the United States for two decades, said her friend, Liz Chavez, 37.

 

“She had always felt like a girl, from an early age. She struggled a lot with discrimination from her family that didn’t want to accept it,” Chavez said. “For people in Mexico, it’s really hard to be transgender.”

 

Romualdo-Rodriguez had recently been granted asylum to remain in the United States. Romualdo-Rodriguez, a sex worker, had worked hard to lose weight and was excited for her trip to Miami for her surgeries.

 

“She was so confident in herself,” Chavez said. “She was so beautiful. She was living her best life.”


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1 comment:

bob walsh said...

If she was so beautiful why did she need a butt lift?