Heidi Montag has come clean about her regrets in the
past. Now the TV personality has confessed her “biggest” regret –
liposuction.
Heidi Montag, 25, is blaming the appearance of cellulite on her thighs on the weight-loss procedure.
“I can’t believe I did this to myself,” Heidi Montag commented,
adding, “I’m so insecure about my legs . . . I rarely wear shorts.”
According to physicians, most women over the age of 25 battle with
the appearance of cellulite on their thighs, and one plastic surgeon
isn’t surprised to hear Heidi Montag complain about cellulite.
From
In Touch, “Though she had perfectly smooth legs prior
to the surgeries, Heidi was horrified when photos surfaced depicting
what appeared to be cellulite on her thighs just a few months after the
body-contouring procedure.”
Heidi Montag added a bit of advice for those looking to maintain
their figure without resorting to surgery. “Try to lose weight and eat
healthily,” she added.
Heidi Montag appeared on the cover of
People magazine in
January 2010 and denied she had an addiction to plastic surgery after
undergoing a marathon ten procedures in a day during November 2009. At
that point in time, Heidi Montag had already undergone a nose job and
breast augmentation surgery.
Physicians caution liposuction is not the right procedure for
everybody looking to shape their body in a certain way. Dr. John Di Saia
of San Clemente and Orange voiced his reaction to the criticism of the
procedure offered by Heidi Montag:
“Heidi has lost her luster to the entertainment community. I’d wager
she would say anything to make the powers that be happy, and bagging on
your plastic surgery is popular now.
“With that being said, lipo is not a solution for all. As we have
seen in other entertainers (e.g. Tara Reid) lipo can leave patients with
irregularities seen in the treated skin. This is not a common
occurrence but happens much more prominently in cases, in which it is
performed inappropriately.
“There has to be enough fat to treat, and the skin over it has to
have the appropriate tone or elasticity. These are issues judged
properly by trained personnel. Philosophy also has a good deal to do
with which patients are offered surgery in a particular practice.
“Heidi was quite thin before surgery and is likely to have had
surgery in areas that were not good targets . . . too little fat to
treat. I’d bet that is the source of her troubles if they exist to any
significant extent, anyway.”
collegenews.com