In this episode of Carpools & Cannulas, Dr. Gallus of Restore SD Plastic Surgery in San Diego, CA, and Dr. Greer of Greer Plastic Surgery in Cleveland, OH, run the list of procedures they would never entertain. Sorry Brazilian Butt Lift fans! Also, the moms veer into surgery they would have if they had unlimited time to recover – the most popular being tummy tuck surgery.
Transcript
Dr. Gallus: Hey, everybody. Welcome to another edition of “Carpools & Cannulas.” Tonight, we have an exciting topic to discuss myself and Dr. Greer who will be joining shortly, there she is, waving. We’re gonna talk about the three plastic surgery procedures we would never personally have, and I am excited to talk about, because there are so many things I would do if I had the time, but a few that are on my no list. So, as soon as she requests the ability to get on, we will engage on that. And I see Kelly’s here with us. Hi. Hi, everybody. Just waiting for Dr. Greer to get her internet working, I guess. And then actually, this was inspired by Dr. Colleen’s post about five surgeries that she would never have, and I feel like we share some of them, maybe for different reasons. I’m trying to view her request. Sorry. Okay. Go live. Hopefully, she pops up. I swear to God, I switched to AT&T and I still have this lowest internet ever. There you are. Yeah, you made it.
Dr. Greer: I requested and it wasn’t going through.
Dr. Gallus: I can’t with…you know. Do that. Okay. So, all right. Well, I was just sharing with our listeners what we were gonna talk about, which is three procedures that we would never ourselves have personally, and I’m gonna guess one of them we probably have in common with Dr. Colleen, and I’m gonna guess you probably also are not a fan of having a BBL for yourself.
Dr. Greer: Ding, ding, ding. And I’m not talking about Broad Band Light because I love those, but yeah, that is top of my list, I would not have fat grafted into the buttocks and I wouldn’t get butt implants either.
Dr. Gallus: Oh yeah. Nobody should get butt implants, I don’t think. I feel like that’s not a good idea in general for anybody, but I mean, I can’t imagine…
Dr. Greer: There are surgeons doing them.
Dr. Gallus: I know.
Dr. Greer: Actually, people I know, like, do them now.
Dr. Gallus: They’re actually breast implants, yeah, and you’re gonna sit on them, and I just don’t feel like that’s gonna hold up over time. And then when you expand that area and then take it out, it’s not gonna go well. That being said…
Dr. Greer: And the fat grafting, I mean that just…if you gain weight, plus that whole, like, 3% risk of death, I’m not cool with, or 3 in 1000, sorry, 0.3% risk, but still higher than I want.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. I just don’t really… If I want a bigger booty, I think I would want muscle mass there, I’d want a toner opposed to thicker. Yeah. And I feel like my butt’s already kind of big and I don’t need any more fat back there, and it makes clothes kind of hard to wear or find or any of that. And then it’s not like you’re getting a perfectly sculpted, airbrushed, Photoshopped booty. It’s still your booty, was just more fat in it. No, no.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. And then imagine gaining 20 pounds in 10 years. It’s not good.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, no. So that’s a no. So, okay, so that tops the list there. What about… All right. What else is on your list of things not to have done?
Dr. Greer: Thread lift. I don’t want a thread lift. They come back into fashion every so often, and I know we have a couple of colleagues who do use them and get good results, but I just feel like if something’s asymmetric or there’s little, like, irregularities or like tucks and darts… Anyway, it’s impossible to get them out, so…
Dr. Gallus: That’s true. At least they’re not permanent like the original ones were.
Dr. Greer: That’s true. Yeah.
Dr. Gallus: I remember when I was in training, the original ones were popular and I didn’t do them in training, but the very gay spin instructor had had it done that I knew from the gym and I was frightened for him. Those were permanent sutures and then they had issues where people were lasered over them and it melted the suture, which was kind of a disaster. So at least now they’re not permanent and they dissolve and they’re supposed to stimulate collagen. It always looks really cool on Instagram.
Dr. Greer: It does, it does.
Dr. Gallus: But I agree, not a fan. And then Kelly mentioned this in her list of things she didn’t want to have done, it was the upper lip lift, which I strongly consider doing myself because I have a long upper lip, but I would not be a good candidate for it because the base of my nose is pretty narrow so it would look super weird. So I think that’s one of those surgeries…
Dr. Greer: Yeah, yours would just be like right in the middle, nowhere else. It can look good on the right person. I know Deborah White in Arizona does a ton of them and she gets really nice results, but I think you’re right, patient selections.
Dr. Gallus: I probably will scar with a darkened scar because I’m of Hispanic origin and my nose is so narrow that it would just be a central lip lift, which would look super weird, and I’d look like the queen of hearts or something in “Alice in Wonderland,” so no.
Dr. Greer: I mean, that would be a look.
Dr. Gallus: Yes, if I was into, like, gonna be on American Horror Story or something, maybe that would be a good look. So, yeah, so that’s a no for me. A no to the thread lift. I’m honestly thinking of what else.
Dr. Greer: I know. I mean, like, I have a list of definitely want, I would like a lift. I would like GalaFLEX with that, if I can find someone nearby who does it. I would like a tummy tuck.
Dr. Gallus: I know. I would like a diastasis repair.
Dr. Greer: Yes. Yes to that. I have a little pot belly when I relax.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah.
Dr. Greer: I debate about implants, though. I really do debate about implants. Like, I like the volume, don’t know that I ever want surgery again, kind of okay with being a B cup.
Dr. Gallus: Oh, right. I always tell patients about implants. You really have to wanna have that upper pull fullness or you have no other options for volume. So I was pretty flat, I was like a B minus and I have smallish implants. Oh, right, TikTok did see… Yeah. I was like aghast. I would’ve lost my freaking mind over the platysma bands. First of all, you can just do that with Botox, A, and second of all, Dr. Klein is mentioning that somebody made a comment about her needing her platysma bands taken care of or a neck lift.
Dr. Greer: I know people feel like commenting on your appearance is totally valid. Yes, people have commented on how I blink slower in my left eye. Thanks. Like, it’s not from Botox, okay? That’s just my face.
Dr. Gallus: That’s funny. Well, I’m sure after this little discussion, people will be like, “You have implants?” And I’m like, “Yeah, you don’t have to have them to, like…” Like, they don’t have to be like, “Look, I have implants.” You could just be flat or not so flat.
Dr. Greer: Oh, yeah. If I were any smaller than I am, it would be a definite yes. I’m just, like, kind of on the fence because I know they’d look beautiful, I just don’t know if I care that much.
Dr. Gallus: Right. Right. No. And I feel like that gets to the heart of… So there’s, like I said, things… I’ll add calf implants.
Dr. Greer: It’s just my face, sorry. I want that T-shirt.
Dr. Gallus: It’s just my face. Yeah. I can just be, like, “No, I have implants.” Sorry. Sorry to disappoint. Yeah, I think it’s that risk-benefit. Like, you have to really want it, otherwise, like I said, there’s a litany of things I would do if I have unlimited time to recover and money.
Dr. Greer: Right, it’s the hassle factor. Like, this is why I haven’t… Brigit, that’s my nanny, saying she’ll give us some of hers. Her dream procedure is reduction, obviously. Yeah, I know. It’s like that hassle factor. Like, I could go get a tummy tuck. It’s just like, “Do I care that much to take the time off? Nah.”
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. And I really started thinking about this the other day because I did see a patient who… It’s always frightening when it’s somebody whose physical attributes resemble yours, and so she has similar abdomen in that she doesn’t have very fat and very little skin laxity and really just needs a diastasis repair, so-called mini tummy tuck, but her belly button is not low enough or high enough that you could just float it. Anyway, but it really bothers her. And then I go home and think, “Oh, shoot, should my abdomen really bother me?”
Dr. Greer: Should I care more about my… I don’t know, everybody has their thing. That’s why when people come in and they’re like, “Tell me what I need,” I’m like, “I don’t know what bugs you.” Because like things bug me on my face. Like, I would like a lateral brow lift. I feel like I have really straight eyebrows. I guarantee no one else notices this.
Dr. Gallus: Correct. Yeah. So yes, it is part of what really bothers you and keeps you up late at night. And then, unfortunately, in our world, we’re always, like, looking at things that could be improved in other people, and so it is human nature to be, like, “Huh, maybe I could use that,” and I’m gonna be ready for Kelly with a neck lift because I have…like, my platysma is, you know, overactive.
Dr. Greer: I think we’ve got two.
Dr. Gallus: I know, but mine’s been functioning… Like, I call it the muscle of horror. I look like one of those lizards that, like, puts out that thing.
Dr. Greer: Like in “Jurassic Park.”
Dr. Gallus: Yes.
Dr. Greer: And they’re like.
Dr. Gallus: Yes, it’s so funny. So, yeah, but I was gonna say speaking of things that I absolutely don’t care about but I can say is a physical weakness on my part is that my calves are small, no matter, you know. I would have to dedicate, like, an hour a day to calf raises or something to get large calves, but the idea of putting calf implants in is so just…
Dr. Greer: Oh, yeah, no, I would never… My only experience with calf implants was watching, like, a “Discovery Channel” show where the guy got necrotizing fasciitis afterward.
Dr. Gallus: Oh, yeah. That actually happened down here in San Diego. Somebody wanted it and ended up with her legs amputated. This was probably 20 years ago, but still…
Dr. Greer: Yeah. I would get liposuction on my legs. It would have to be… I would probably go to Meegan Gruber because she’s amazing, but again, one of those things where I’m like, “Do I really care about my cankles? Not that much.” Although one of my chief residents pointed out my ankles versus his very slender ankles, Johnny Franco, I’m calling you out. In residency, he’s like, “No, that is kind of a cankle.” I’m like, “Are you for real? Really?” I mean, yeah, they are, but do we have to say it out loud?
Dr. Gallus: We could do a cankle transplant and you can put that fat in my ankles and calves and then I’d have a more balanced calf.
Dr. Greer: That’s fantastic. We’ll get right on that.
Dr. Gallus: It’d be like a living donor of calf transplant.
Dr. Greer: It’s like all the people who try to donate their extra skin to the burn unit.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. Yeah. Except you can’t be alive for that.
Dr. Greer: I always thought like if you were an identical twin and you had the same gene, so no immune suppression, and your twin had, like, you know, very severe burn, would they let you donate skin?
Dr. Gallus: I feel like it doesn’t work. I feel like probably someone…
Dr. Greer: Really? Has that been tried? I don’t know.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. I feel like you still would need immunosuppression, unfortunately. Maybe somebody smarter can answer that question. So, yeah, so, well what’s your third surgery? So BBL for both of us, no thread lifts, upper lip lift.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. Including butt implants. And I don’t know that I have a third one. I mean the other ones I wouldn’t want, I don’t really need. Like, I wouldn’t really want a rhinoplasty because that packing sounds miserable, but my nose is fine. I mean it’s a little crooked, but it’s okay.
Dr. Gallus: What about… Yeah, you don’t really need anything so it’s hard to say, but even if you didn’t need it, sometimes it’s not a need, is there something you would be like, “I’m never doing ear pinning surgery or arm lift or…”? I don’t know. Those are all, I feel like, reasonable options for people.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. No, I don’t…
Dr. Gallus: What about thigh lift? That’s a brutal one. Like, if you needed it.
Dr. Greer: Oh, I would do it in a heartbeat. I’ve thought about getting one. I had lipo there and there’s just… And, like, can I do my own? I mean, I almost could. Oh, yeah, no. I’ve thought about that one, that one’s not a problem.
Dr. Gallus: Okay. So that’s still on the maybe list then. Recovery is kind of brutal, so…
Dr. Greer: Yeah, I suppose it is a bit, but I don’t know. Talk to me in 20 years when my thighs are all creepy and saggy. Yeah. I don’t… Maybe that boats well for me, that there’s only, like, two procedures that I really don’t love, and they’re not ones I do because, again, I’m like, I don’t like the whole reasoning, I don’t like the outcomes.
Dr. Gallus: I wouldn’t do them on someone else. I just think I’m the right patient and in the right… And I don’t do over-the-top ones either.
Dr. Greer: Right. I mean, if you’re fixing like a hip dip or just changing proportions, totally different ballgame than just doing this enormous butt.
Dr. Gallus: Right. And I personally have a hip dip, but I still do not want anyone making my butt any bigger. I just can’t. I know…
Dr. Greer: Okay, wait. Liposuction to the butt, now that’s probably what I would not do either.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, no. Although we’ll probably…
Dr. Greer: I know, again, Dr. Gruber does it. That was, like, one of those things we just were taught never really to do in residency. Have you ever lipoed a butt?
Dr. Gallus: No.
Dr. Greer: Me neither.
Dr. Gallus: Probably, like, above, like, the lower back, but not the butt itself.
Dr. Greer: Right, because I feel like things would get all saggy and loose and bad, although I think the times I’ve heard Dr. Gruber refer to doing it, it’s usually to correct fat grafting.
Dr. Gallus: Correct. Which I think in 10 years we’ll probably be…we will have learned how to do that.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. Because there’s gonna be a lot of lose fat.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah.
Dr. Greer: Oops. My cat’s hitting the phone. I will say like fat graft into the face would have to be pretty cautious too. I do that… Well, actually, I’ve decided to… Yeah, I don’t actually do that very often to the face, I’ve done it, but I think the people who go way over with the volume… Like, I like dissolvable fillers. Oh, I wouldn’t do permanent fillers. That’s one, there we go. I would never do like Bellafill or refill.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. Or, like, the Gore-Tex to the upper lip.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. No. I want things that are dissolvable and that go away on their own when it comes to stuff like that. So I wouldn’t do a permanent filler, that’s my third.
Dr. Gallus: Okay. That’s fair. I would say fat grafting to the face, that’s another big reveal. I had that done years ago now.
Dr. Greer: Really? Is that why you have such great cheeks?
Dr. Gallus: No, I always had those, and I hated them. But now I tell my kids if they, like, hate their chubby cheeks, “Hey, guess what? It pays off later.”
Dr. Greer: It does.
Dr. Gallus: But I actually did it on a dare, as most plastic surgeons do.
Dr. Greer: Was it a hold my beer moment?
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. Hold my beer, watch this. So we had a surgeon who was a reservist and he was at Navy, and we were having a discussion because fat grafting at the time was, like, a little bit controversial to do at the time of facelift, now it’s pretty standard. And then there was a big debate whether you fat graft at the beginning of the facelift or at the end of the facelift, I feel like we were having this conversation. And then he mentioned, “Well, you could just fat graft,” and I was like, “Yeah, but nobody wants to go under anesthesia just for fat grafting.” And he’s like, “Oh, you can absolutely do it under local.” I was like, “No way, no one’s gonna do that.” And mind you, I was still in the Navy and not in a private practice setting so I had a more narrow scope of… He’s like, “Yeah, I’ll bring my centrifusion and we’ll just do you.” And I was like “Okay, cool.” So he’s like, “We’ll do it under local.” My scrub techs were so excited, you could have sold tickets. He like…
Dr. Greer: That’s hilarious. I know everybody would be watching, you see, like, people peeking around the door. It’s awesome.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. So he was gonna do it in the clinic, in the office setting, and we started in there, and then he was like, “Nope, you’re right, we need to go to the little procedure room.” I’m like, “All right.” So already anteing up, and then he lipoed it a little bit out of my outer thigh, spun it down, and then fat grafted my face. That was enough to make me know that I would never… Like, I don’t think I would do to somebody else because in order to block the face was so painful and I did look like a pumpkin for about two weeks.
Dr. Greer: And like those cannulas, as fine as they are for the face and they are, and they clog all the time and it’s annoying, that’s a pretty big cannula to be sticking… I mean, that’s, what, 18 gauge to be sticking bluntly in somebody’s face, that’s not gonna feel awesome.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. So he did my temples, my cheeks. I don’t think he did my lips, but, like, nasolabial lines, maybe down here somewhere. I will say the one benefit of doing it is whatever that substance is in that’s mixed in with your own fat, there’s, like, some growth factor component to it. The fat’s long gone, like that disappeared after a couple of years easily, but it definitely, like, gave me a healthy glow and rejuvenation that lasted much longer, so…
Dr. Greer: Just some PRP.
Dr. Gallus: Huh? Yeah, PRP.
Dr. Greer: Just some PRP, get those same growth factors.
Dr. Gallus: I’m gonna do that tomorrow actually.
Dr. Greer: Oh, are you? How do you… Do you inject it? Do you do microneedling? What do you do?
Dr. Gallus: So I don’t offer it in my office as of yet, but the OR techs, the OR team I work with, there are surgeons in Fiji hopefully not watching this Instagram live and we’re gonna have… We were talking-
Dr. Greer: Regardless if he is, you’re definitely not using his PRP centrifuge, definitely not.
Dr. Gallus: They’ve been offering me their Emsculpt… They’re gonna come over because I have things that they don’t have and vice versa. So they’re gonna bring their PRP and they’re gonna do laser hair removal. We’re having, like, an afternoon of spa day for ourselves, where we’re gonna do the lasers that we have and I’m gonna do…and my nurse Jordan’s gonna do probably radiofrequency micro-needling topped with PRP and micro-needling. So I do have micro, but how I think I’m gonna do it is just smear the PRP on my face and then micro stamp it in as opposed to kind of injecting it.
Dr. Greer: Yeah, I did Vivace on my chest a couple of weeks ago. Conveniently, the PRP rep was coming for lunch that day just to demo it. So I was like, “Here’s mine.” Getting my blood in those 30-milliliter vacuum containers, those things are huge. So we just spread it on after.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. So we reach to the radiofrequency part of it and then turn it off, change the depth, smear it on. Boom, boom, boom, boom.
Dr. Greer: So you do that for the radiofrequency? Yeah.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, because the idea is to maybe not coagulate.
Dr. Greer: Yeah.
Dr. Gallus: So not the energy, like, so you don’t coagulate the PRP. So that’s what we’re gonna try.
Dr. Greer: Right.
Dr. Gallus: I do have a regular in pen, but I love radiofrequency micro-needling. We have the Virtue, and it’s so good. Like, it’s so worth it to do that versus just straight micro-needling.
Dr. Greer: Nice. I’m excited to see the results. I need a couple of more treatments on my chest, but…
Dr. Gallus: Mm-hmm. You’re doing fine lines?
Dr. Greer: Yeah. I get like, you know, those little vertical lines when you wake up in the morning and your chest has all been pushed together and it’s not awesome. Plus, I already had a halo peel earlier, so I figured we’d hit my chest with that, but it was really comfortable, it was not uncomfortable on my chest.
Dr. Gallus: Oh, yeah.
Dr. Greer: I think face maybe hurts, hence the numbing cream, but body’s fine.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, we do numb for that. And then I think I tried to turn it up on one of my treatments a couple of months ago and I do have a high pain tolerance, hence my ability to take fat grafting to the face with just a local block. But I was tapping out at a certain level and I was like, “Oh, yeah, we should just…” And you get the same results, so there’s really no reason to, like, crank it and then just be miserable. So, yeah. So anyway, so on the dare, I did get my fat. I got, like, 30-ish ccs of fat put in my face and, like I said, it’s rejuvenating. I just don’t know that it was excruciating to any area in my face that wasn’t numb that couldn’t be blocked was, like, hardcore to get it injected.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. I think I’d wanna do that awake. And I had lipo awake and that was fine, but you tumesce.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, right. Yeah. That’s not a big deal. It was like the areas of the face that weren’t numb were painful, so…
Dr. Greer: Yeah. Although I guess sometimes in the body, because again, Dr. Gruber, apparently, Meegan, I’m actually stalking you, but I know she does fat grafting awake too, but I think she tumesces, right, a little bit?
Dr. Gallus: Where she’s putting it in? Does she do…?
Dr. Greer: I’ve seen her do fat grafting to the breast awake on Instagram, so I’m curious.
Dr. Gallus: I think that’s possible, but we could ask…
Dr. Greer: That’s probably tolerable.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. It’s not the same as getting…like, literally the upper third of your face just hurts, but whatever. So don’t discount it, you know, whenever you’re in San Diego, we’re happy to, like, do it for you.
Dr. Greer: You know what? I’m just gonna teach you that lateral brow lift technique, take your end of brow and just…
Dr. Gallus: Oh, yeah, I can do that.
Dr. Greer: Lift. Yeah, just…
Dr. Gallus: Oh, no. You like the deep plain one.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. I did the deep plain one where you release the ligaments, it’s nice. It’s easy.
Dr. Gallus: Do you do those under local?
Dr. Greer: I have. Yeah, actually I have. And those ones aren’t bad, the only uncomfortable area is here, supertrochlear, superorbital nerves. Those are easy to block, and then the rest is all subperiosteal so that’s not super sensitive. I just warn them ahead of time, “You are gonna hear metal scraping on your skull, and if you are not okay with that, let me know.” But I’ve done a couple under local, and both patients did just fine.
Dr. Gallus: Oh, that’s good.Yeah. That is the thing about doing stuff under local on the face because you’re right there and they can hear everything.
Dr. Greer: You hear it. You hear everything.
Dr. Gallus: Then that’s a problem.
Dr. Greer: Yeah.
Dr. Gallus: All right. Excellent. Yeah. I do know people who do facelifts under local, but I feel like it’s a long time to sit awake and…
Dr. Greer: Yeah, I scrubbed in on one of those in residency, did not… Like zero out of five stars would not…
Dr. Gallus: Not endorse.
Dr. Greer: I didn’t like it as the resident.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah, it’s two thumbs down.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. I think at some point the patient got nauseated from the premeds and then she vomited. And I was like, “Oh, I’m out. I’ll be in the corner staying sterile.”
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. No thank you. Yeah. Absolutely. All right. Well, cool. So I feel like we’ve covered surgeries we don’t wanna have and surgeries are on our wish list.
Dr. Greer: We’ve had.
Dr. Gallus: Yeah.
Dr. Greer: And we’ve had.
Dr. Gallus: Covering the list. All right, cool. Oh, actually in two weeks I’ll be in Hawaii. Sorry. So we’ll have to push it back.
Dr. Greer: Poor thing.
Dr. Gallus: I know. I was looking forward to that, although I might be writing a book chapter and doing a lecture while I’m up there because I haven’t done it yet. That’s okay. My husband says “why?”
Dr. Greer: Try and see if you can enjoy Hawaii.
Dr. Gallus: I know. Start writing tonight, “Why would you agree to do that?” I’m like, “I don’t know.” Same reason I needed to listen to that webinar about how to say no.
Dr. Greer: Yeah. Well, and you feel like, “Oh, it’s important. It’ll build my career.”
Dr. Gallus: Yeah. I’m contributing.
Dr. Greer: Yeah.
Dr. Gallus: Huh. Well, yeah, I would love to… We’ll think of something or we can talk about hand rejuvenation. We’ll chat about that next time and we’ll set up a date, and if anybody… Oh, my daughter’s just joining in for the end.
Dr. Greer: She’s excellent, I mean, two minutes before we’re done.
Dr. Gallus: If anybody has a suggestion for us to talk about, please DM us. And if not, we’ll see you in, like, three or four weeks, I guess. Or you can see Dr. Greer on TikTok because she slays there and has a 100,000…
Dr. Greer: I did hit 100,000 followers last week, I did.
Dr. Gallus: That’s amazing. I have, like, 30 followers.
Dr. Greer: It was insane. I was posting, like, five to six times a week and commenting back when people comment on how I blink slower. Yeah. I mean it’s a bit, but honestly, I get so many patients from there and they’ve all watched my videos. Yeah, and it’s great because they actually… I see them. Hello, children. They come in, they feel like they know me already, they’ve already heard my explanations on everything, like we already have a relationship, and it’s so much easier for me doing a consult because they’ve heard me talk about all this already.
Dr. Gallus: That’s true. And you find that it’s easier than Instagram or you post the same frequency, right? Or no?
Dr. Greer: Yeah, I do. In Instagram, never took off. I just hit 3000, and only because TikTok took off. I don’t know, TikTok, like, it just seems… I think everybody has their platform that works well for them and that one works well for me. My attention span is short, I can do less than a three-minute video, and yep.
Dr. Gallus: Props. Yeah. Because yours is educational, that’s what I appreciate, that you hit 100,000 without having to do…
Dr. Greer: Like I’m not dancing. I’m not the former cheerleader, I rarely do funny things although a couple of times I have. Yeah. It’s just… And, like, half the time I’m not even wearing makeup. I’m just, like, on my couch with wet hair after a shower and I’m like, “Hey, let’s talk about lip filler, I got some, it’s swollen. There we go, that’s the video.”
Dr. Gallus: Well, that’s awesome, and congratulations.
Dr. Greer: Thank you.
Dr. Gallus: And don’t know what my girls are… My daughter has a couple of friends over so they’re hysterical about something. I think they put themselves watching Instagram live, I don’t know, whatever. It’s very meta.
Dr. Greer: Enjoy. Enjoy finding out.
Dr. Gallus: Yes. I can’t wait. All right. Well, it was good to see you. Talk later.
Dr. Greer: You too. Bye.
Dr. Gallus: Ciao.
About Restore SD & Dr. Katerina Gallus
As the Director of Restore SD Plastic Surgery, board certified female plastic surgeon Dr. Katerina Gallus has over 15 years of experience helping San Diego patients enjoy head to toe rejuvenation with face, breast and body procedures. After a successful career as a Navy plastic surgeon, Dr. Gallus founded Restore SD Plastic Surgery with the intention of creating a welcoming space for anyone seeking cosmetic enhancement.
Restore SD Plastic Surgery offers popular facial rejuvenation procedures like facelift & neck lift, facial fat grafting, and eyelid lift; breast augmentation with implants, breast lifts or breast reduction; body contouring procedures such as tummy tuck, liposuction, mommy makeover, and Brazilian butt lift (BBL), as well as aesthetician services, BOTOX, injectable fillers, and laser treatments.
Dr. Gallus and her highly-experienced aesthetics team are here to help you look and feel your best! To schedule a personal consultation, please contact us online or call our San Diego office at (858) 224-2281 today.
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