12     Medical Awards 2017/18 procedure is tailored to the specific anatomy and desires  of the patient, while maintaining the normal anatomic  relationships and appearance. The procedure: I usually do the procedure under local anaesthetic with  light, oral sedation. It is generally very well tolerated, and  the discomfort only minimal.  The patient is placed in the lithotomy position and a  surgical marking pen is used to plan the extent and  placement of the incisions taking care not to distort the  normal anatomy. Once the markings have been checked,  local anaesthetic is injected (using “normal” dental  cartridges containing lidocaine and epinephrine) in to  the labium to numb it completely, minimise bleeding,  and distend the usually floppy tissue (tumescence)  making it easier to accurately resect the tissue. In general,  more mucosa than core tissue is removed and more so  laterally (from the outside of the inner labia) than from  the inside. Once careful haemostasis (stopping of any  bleeding) is achieved using a Colorado tip cautery device,  the core tissues are approximated using slow absorbing  interrupted sutures, followed by accurate approximation  of the mucosal edges using 4/5 x loupe magnification  and faster absorbing suture material. The resultant scar is  placed low down on the labia with a very short oblique  scar traversing the labial edge, and then running within  the groove between minor and major labia to the level  of the clitoral hood laterally. All the stitches dissolve, and  aside from some antibiotic gel that needs to be applied  for a few days, no special post op care, other than perhaps  bed rest for a few days, is needed. Abstinence from sexual  Statistics on labiaplasty have been collected since 2015  by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). The  2016 ASPS statistics report showed that labiaplasty is  more popular than ever, with over 12,000 procedures  performed by ASPS members last year (a 39% increase). What is a labiaplasty?  Labiaplasty is a plastic surgery procedure sought for  cosmetic and/or functional reasons. Although there is  a wide normal variation in size and shape of the inner  labia, some women find it cosmetically unacceptable if  the labia minora protrude past the labia majora. Enlarged  or protruding labia minora can occasionally be an  embarrassing problem, particularly in sexual situations,  when wearing tight clothing or swimwear. Patients may  also seek help for hygiene reasons. I usually re-assure  patients that their labia are quite normal, and that much  like noses, they come in an infinite number of size and  shape variations, all of which are considered normal.  It is therefore a choice, as in the case of a larger nose,  to change one form of normal for another, rather than  changing the abnormal to normal. Technically, a labiaplasty reduces excess labia minora  tissue and refashions it such that it is less protuberant.  There are two main ways to achieve this surgically – one is  using an “edge trim” technique and the other involves the  resection of a roughly triangular wedge of labial tissue.  Both techniques, and the plethora of variations there- of, have their proponents, and my favoured approach is  based on the wedge resection procedure first published  by Dr Gary Alter and subsequently modified by a group in  Brazil. The operative principles remain the same, but the  Understanding the growing popularity of labiaplasty surgery By Dr Skoll Dr. Paul J. Skoll paul@plasticsurgeon.co.za +27 21 426 2511