Reduce excess male breast tissue for a flatter, more masculine chest contour — with careful scar placement and natural proportions.
Gynaecomastia refers to benign enlargement of male breast tissue — often related to hormonal fluctuations, genetics, medications, or weight change. When persistent tissue or skin excess does not respond to lifestyle measures, surgery can restore a flatter chest contour.
Techniques may include liposuction, glandular excision, skin reduction, or a combination — selected after clinical examination and discussion of your goals.
Men who feel self-conscious about chest prominence, nipple projection, or asymmetry may be candidates once medical causes are considered. Stable health, realistic expectations, and non-smoking status support safer healing.
Adolescents may be observed initially if pubertal change is recent; timing of surgery is discussed on a case-by-case basis.
Improved chest profile and clothing fit for suitable patients
Scars planned to be as discreet as anatomy allows
Combines gland removal and liposuction when both contribute
Clear pathway for compression garments and follow-up
Assessment & diagnosis
Examination, photography, and review of medical history, medications, and goals.
Surgical plan
Selection of liposuction, direct excision, periareolar access, or skin tightening patterns as needed.
Procedure
Meticulous tissue removal with symmetry checks and haemostasis.
Recovery programme
Garment use, wound care, activity limits, and staged return to exercise.
Wear your compression garment as directed to limit swelling and support skin redraping. Avoid heavy pushing or chest loading until cleared.
Keep incisions clean and dry; attend follow-ups for drain removal if used and for scar care advice as healing matures.
Next step
Arrange a confidential consultation to review options, alternatives, and a personalised plan with Dr. Manandhar.