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Has anyone ever seen this?

Yesterday, I was at a business and the woman I was dealing with had on a very low-cut shirt on. Instead of showing normal cleavage, she had big boobs with almost no separation between them. I mean, instead of having two distinct breasts with the skin in between them at the breastbone, it was two boobs bridged together way out from the breastbone, very nearly making them into one wide boob. I found it really difficult to keep my eyes on her face instead of the train wreck below. 😱

What would cause that besides a really, really bad breast implant job? Maybe a car wreck after getting implants?
 
Originally posted by: Bryophyte
Yesterday, I was at a business and the woman I was dealing with had on a very low-cut shirt on. Instead of showing normal cleavage, she had big boobs with almost no separation between them. I mean, instead of having two distinct breasts with the skin in between them at the breastbone, it was two boobs bridged together way out from the breastbone, very nearly making them into one wide boob. I found it really difficult to keep my eyes on her face instead of the train wreck below. 😱

What would cause that besides a really, really bad breast implant job? Maybe a car wreck after getting implants?

i've seen that too... bad boob job. 🙁

uniboob = symmastia

Symmastia is usually a result of over-dissection of the tissues in the cleavage area. Some surgeons do this in hopes of creating, or increasing cleavage. Symmastia is commonly referred to as "breadloafing", or "kissing implants", or "uniboob". With this condition, the implants actually meet in the middle of the chest, giving the appearance of one breast, instead of two. Symmastia seems to be more prevalent among thin women, mainly due to the fact that thin women usually have less tissue and/or fat covering the sternum. Sometimes, the surgeon will attempt to release some of these tissues, in order to get the implants closer together. If you have a qualified, and experienced plastic surgeon, this is a complication you shouldn't have to worry about. It's the least common of all cosmetic breast augmentation complications.

Patients with pectus excavatum are more prone to symmastia, especially if they do not find a surgeon who is skilled at placing implants in women with chestwall deformaties. Pectus excavatum (a depressed breastbone) will cause the implants to slope inward, toward the cleavage area. This creates more pressure on the tissues in that area, and may result in symmastia. Some doctors recommend placing smaller implants in women with PE, since this will reduce the amount of pressure that is placed on the cleavage area.

Symmastia may not be noticeable right after surgery. However, it can appear at anytime after surgery from a few days to several months later.
 
Hey, now, don't go posting photos that will get this thread locked. :| Do a google image search if you want to know what it looks like.

The woman I saw yesterday was way worse than that, though. There was no cleavage at the top whatsoever, just a very slight incurve at the outermost point of the bust (between the nipples).
 
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