All Episodes

January 18, 2025 • 26 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Well Doctor Arthur Perry, he's one of the top plastic surgeons.
He's got offices in Manhattan, New Jersey. You know what,
He's been doing the show here on w R for
years and years and years. Very popular show and a
great plastic surgeon. Everybody has questions on this subject, so
he's the guy to ask.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Doctor Arthur Perry, and the public wants to know.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
That public doesn't get a damn.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
And I went to his office and I said, I said,
look at my face. And he goes, yeah, look at
your face. We're going to do with your fan What
can you do with his face? I go like that,
that's what you got. I go, look at this. I'm
getting old. I said, I'm gonna maybe he can fix
it up a little bit.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
Doctor Oz, are you there, I'm here, Ark, and I
want to get to plagged you. Having worked with you
on a book and numerous other activity.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
You want to talk to Arthur Perry, the best in plastic.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Surgery and workable knowledge, but also your grace at delivering content,
which is why it's been a blessing to have you
on my show so many times.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
When I was a resident at the University of Chicago,
we had a.

Speaker 5 (00:57):
Mean you're smart, as I really really gift this position.
I want to pay you the highest trut I can
give to a surgeon, which is when people come to you,
they don't come for an operation, they come for an opinion.
And that's why I trust you with my friends and relatives.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
I didn't realize we were going to get the Michael
Jordan of Plastic Surgeons nine two and zero bows to
this guide and welcome. This is for certified plastic surgeon,
doctor Arthur Perry, and this is what's your wrinkle right
here on wo R and Straight talk about cosmetic surgery
on the podcast Around the World. And I am back.

(01:31):
It's twenty twenty five. It's freezing cold. We're broadcasting live
from the Hamptons this evening where we saw a what
do you call a flock of turkeys? When you see
about twenty of it? Is it a flock? Flock? A flock?
And that voice, that voice, yes, that voice was that voice.
I got her out of retirement. We've got Susan Warner,

(01:52):
the amazing co host this evening, and you know it
takes a lot to get her out of retirement, but
she's back. What did it take to get me out
of retirement? West Time. Well, last yesterday Susan had kind
of a little adventure. We were ice skating, and what
happened to you, Susan? You went diving, try.

Speaker 6 (02:13):
To turn, to do a turn and ended up all
wait on my left wrist and.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Shattered my rist, shattered her wrist and in the hospital
and broken wrist. And now all she can she can't
do anything except talking the radio. And actually, so she's back,
and yeah, so then you know you don't look any
worse for the wear. So well, anyway, we've got Susan Warner,
the Polisher Prize winning author with me this evening. Susan,

(02:40):
of course, is the author of Never Say Never, Never
Say Always. And I hope you're all buying that book.
And I know that many of you made it the
best seller that it was a few months ago, but
we still want to sell more copies because if it's true,
it is true, if you have suffered any loss, this.

Speaker 6 (02:58):
Is global grief right now. It's not just personal grief. No,
there really is global grief. And we need to find
out how to make each day better and our lives
better and happier. And I think I can help.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
You can and you can buy that book. It's it's
so inexpensive. And you get Amazon dot com and you
can buy her book. And while you're there, you can
you can find uh maybe a copy of my Dollars
and no no plugging two books. Yes, uh yeah, straight
Talk book plugs, straight talk about it to my show
Straight Talk about cosmetic surgery. That's what you want to do.

(03:31):
And while you're on Amazon nonsense when you one stop shopping,
I said NonStop one it is kind of NonStop. You
can pick up these skincare products because we're on Amazon. Now.
We'll talk about that on the show, which we're giving
away bottles of Soft Time. It's the moisturizer. It's great
this time of year when the humidity in your apartment,
in your house is solow. You sit by the fireplace

(03:52):
and it's like the Sahara desert in there. Slather on
the soft Time moisturizer and your face will feel better
and your hands will feel better. So tonight, missus Warner,
we're going to be talking about getting ready for spring weddings. Yay, yay, yeah, yeah,
you know that's a It's a big topic because people
come in right now and they say, I've got this

(04:13):
wedding in May, in June. What can I do to
look as good as possible. We're going to talk about that.
We do this about once a year. We're also going
to talk about one of the silliest things. I love
these uh these procedures that people do to try and
look better that are absolutely ridiculous. We're going to talk
about what Noah likes that one. We're going to talk

(04:34):
about face taping to look better. And I hear young
girls are doing it too. It's just crazy. Okay, well,
you know maybe work Susan. I looked up the data.
We're going to talk about that. And we're going to
talk about removing your breast implan. So many of my
patients now are removing them. I did hundreds and thousands
of breast augmentations over the years, and you know this

(04:57):
is the year people are just taking them out. We're
going to talk about that and what I can do
to make your breast look as good as possible without
the implants that you had for three decades. So the
phone number here at WR is eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten. The show is abbreviated. It's a
half hour in twenty twenty five. So call early eight
hundred three to two one zero seven ten. And we've

(05:18):
already got a call her. We've got We've got Sondra online. Sondra,
we got to speak fast. What is your wrinkle this evening?

Speaker 4 (05:26):
Well, first I must say, Susan, I'm sorry you fail
and hurt yourself. You'll get better quickly. And I read
your book and I recommend it to everyone. It's the best.
So I just want to say that, Oh you welcome, Susan.
Heal fast. So, doctor Kerry, I met my friend today
and last Monday, as you know, I came in to

(05:46):
keep her company while she had the second mole removed.
And she also, as you promised, you said you would
try one capillary with your device that I got to see.
And let me tell you, first of all, I watched
you take out the mole, and when you took it out,
I said to myself, oh my god, it's so deep
down there, and I just didn't know how it was

(06:07):
going to look good. But lo and behold. When I
met my friend today, I said, so, how did your
eyebrow come out? She goes, very good, I said, can
I see it? She goes at the end of the day.
So then when you did the capillary thing, I remember
the device you used was like a magic wand it
was like a little sewing machine. At the end. You

(06:28):
put it right like right on the line and you
just glided it down the line and you pressed the
button and zapped the lines disappeared. So when she did
one and it didn't hurt, you askedid well, Leslie, do
you want to do another? And she said yes, So
she removed them and she's very very hell. So at
the end of the day today she lifted up her

(06:50):
little bangs and I saw her eyebrow. I gotta tell you,
doctor Perry, I'm very impressed, very very impressed. They look
both of them now, beauty full. So there you go.
And then I'll say one more thing you mentioned on.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
The by the way, that was the wait a minute,
that was a Yag laser that I used. The Yag
laser for capillaries, red spots on the face, senile angiomas
things like that. But anyway, go ahead, Sandra.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
So then the last thing I remembered on your show,
you mentioned that you decided to remove a couple of
little brown spots on your forehead. So I said to myself,
I have had one over my eyebrow for a long time.
I've tried the little creams, tried nothing worse. So I
said to myself, why don't I give it a shot.
If doctor Perry can do it to himself, I could

(07:41):
do it to me. So you did whatever you did,
and I'm touching it now and it feels like a little,
you know, raised crust, and it's doctor yeah. So I'm
just gonna wait and see what.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Look.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
The worst that can happen is not thing happened, but
happen maybe.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
All right, Well, well, my little co host here, Susan Warner,
is that your name? Yes? She was, because she had
that t c A, that trichloro acetic acid peel spot
peelo on her hands. It's amazing result. And the orthopedic
surgeon was thrilled with how her hand looked yesterday when

(08:25):
he set the fracture on a wrist. She sorry, what
a sexist thing, right, I just said? He the orthopedic. No,
it was a she in the Hampton's Uh and yes,
she was thrilled with the spotless hands and face of
Susan Warner. Yep. And it takes about a week, so
so you've got another day or two. So hanging in.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
Why did my husband stay? It's going to take about
three months? Why did he say that to me?

Speaker 3 (08:56):
I can't tell you what your husband was thinking. I
don't know.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
Maybe maybe he didn't used, maybe he didn't know what
you used.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
Perhaps, so we'll have to get him in here to
you know, needs to clean up to Yeah, I get
some of his spots off to we do men also,
uh yeah, sure, all right, well listen, Sondra, thank you
so much for the mole update here on w or
and uh and uh and we will see you soon.
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (09:23):
You're welcome.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
All right on board. Certified plastic surgeon, doctor Arthur Berry,
host of What's Your Wrinkle? And that was the mole
update update, the weekly mole update. Okay, so now, Susan,
there are some crazy things on the internet. You know,
you go on Instagram and every week there's something even

(09:45):
dumber and uh sorry sorry, all right, well you know
here was uh this week it was a celebrity facialist
novel technique that softens frown lines, and and uh and
what and what happens here? Okay, so this particular person
is putting tape tape on her face to decrease wrinkles

(10:10):
and lines. Do you think that works so well? How
we'd all use tape? Yeah, you know it's supposed to be.
You know, you put the tape on, and this person says, change.
You follow the lymphatic drainage of the face. And what
it does is it softens the nasal abial folds, the

(10:31):
crows feet, the cheekbones. It's and there's a technique out there.
And you know, so, okay, I can't dismiss a technique
just by saying, you know, it doesn't work, right, I
need to go to the science. So I spent a
lot of time, Susan. I went to the books. I
went to yeah, five minutes. I spent a full five

(10:53):
minutes looking and went on to the National Library of
Medicine and looked for every paper. And I found every paper.
You know how many? There were zero zero, not a
single scientific paper that supports the use of tape to
decrease wrinkles of the face. So if you're gonna do
it now. The only good thing is the tape is cheap.
I was just gonna say, do you have to buy specialty tape? Well,

(11:14):
they say there is a specialty tape you can buy
on Instagram. Yeah. Interestingly, so, I did find the only
paper ever written on this topic. It was from two
thousand and nine and the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.
It was actually written by a very good friend of mine,
one of my professors at the University of Chicago, doctor
Larry Gottlieb. But what it was was the tape was
used to actually lift the cheeks in an eighty three

(11:39):
year old woman who survived a cardiac arrest. So she
wasn't in any shape to have any surgery, so instead
of even doing BOTOXX for her, doctor Gottlieb used tape.

Speaker 6 (11:52):
I know that celebrities before shows tapes tape the faces, but.

Speaker 3 (11:56):
What he did was actually put the tape on and
cover it with make up, so that you know there's
tape butter phase all right, I can hardly speak no, no.

Speaker 6 (12:04):
No, that's what celebrities do before they put tape it back,
pull their skin back, tape it like under their hairline
and then make up.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
I did that with my basket hound also because I
want my basket to look cleaner and younger. So you
know a little flopsy could get out there with the
other baskets. All right, So tape to lift up your face, Okay,
it'll work. Sure if you want to leave tape on
your face, but tape on your face to decrease the
lines after you remove the tape, noube not gonna do it.

(12:31):
So what can I say? No, We're gonna take our
first break. I'm doctor Arthur Perry. I'm with Susan Warner,
my trusty co host in the Hampton's eight hundred three
two one zero seven ten. We'll be back after these words.
Did you know that your skincare may be hurting you
more than helping you. I'm board certified plastic surgeon, Doctor

(12:51):
Arthur Perry. The foundation for looking good is clean, healthy skin.
So I've created a program that is so simple that
every everyone can stay on it long enough to see
real results. It starts with an incredible skin cleaner called
clean Time. It's actually good for your skin. Protect your
skin with my Daytime SPF twenty cream in the evening,

(13:13):
feed your skin with my Powerhouse Nighttime Serum. Nighttime has
vitamin CNA, antioxidants and skin brighteners. And if you like moisturizers,
well I've created soft Time with seramides and Vitamin D.
Throw away the bags of useless products and try doctor
Perry's Skincare. Join the thousands of people whose skin is healthier.
That's Doctor Perry's Skincare on Amazon dot com. And don't

(13:36):
forget to listen to my radio show right here on
WOR every Saturday evening at six pm. They say that
sixty is the new fifty. But while you may feel
and act fifty, the mirror doesn't lie. But that's where
plastic surgery comes in. I'm board certified plastic surgeon, Doctor
Arthur Perry, and I love helping patients look younger and better.

(13:57):
If you've got sagging cheeks, jowls and dreaded turkey gobbler,
it might be time for a little nip and a tuck.
You look more rested and yes younger. With my short
scar facelift and the artistic injection of wrinkle filler or
a laser peel, well, that might be just what it
takes to get you looking as good as you feel.
Let's sit down for an hour consultation in my new
Park Avenue office. Together, we'll come up with a plan

(14:20):
to help you look your best. Give me a call
at eight three three Perry MD. That's a three three
p e r R Y m D. Check me out
on the web at Perryplasticsurgery dot com. And don't forget
to listen to me doctor Arthur Perry, every Saturday evening
at six pm. Right here on wo R you are
listening to What's your Wrinkle?

Speaker 4 (14:40):
With Doctor Arthur Perry.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
What's your wrinkle? N what is your wrinkle? What's your wrinkle? Susan?
What is your wrinkle? Oh, she's looking at me. Well,
she's got this arm in a half cast here then
fingers swollen like little knockwurst right now. But what the heck,
it's my rank? Yeah, what's your wrinkle? Your wrinkle is?
You're broken bone? For someone who's forty howl you forty

(15:04):
something to go ice skating? Oh my goodness, some of
you are just not as good as me. I spent
my childhood playing hockey. It's okay, sorry, Oh she's looking
at me. Oh all right, anyway, let's eight hundred three
two one zero seven ten. That's the phone number here
at wo R. So let's say, missus Warner, you know

(15:25):
someone who's having a wedding this spring. Do you know
anyone that's having a wedding. Yeah, yeah, I think I'm
going to a wedding and yeah, in May, and you'll
want to look as good as possible for that wedding, right,
what if you're the mother of the bride, you're not
the mother, or even maybe you'll be the bride, Susan, Okay, well, anyway,

(15:46):
you know, so you might come in to see me
and say, well, I would like something. In fact, my
daughter's getting married in three weeks. I think it's time
for facelooks. Well do you think that's possible.

Speaker 6 (15:58):
Susan, No, no, no, you got to plan this out.

Speaker 3 (16:00):
You do have to plan it out. You know. If
if let's say two weeks your wedding's coming up, and
you say, yeah that you're fast, that's right, that's about
it for too. Well, you could also have some filler.
You could do filler. There's a small risk of seeing
some bruises a week. Pretty good, pretty good, pretty good.
I mean every now and then I get an outlier

(16:21):
who's white brew. Don't before. You don't want to plan ahead.
So even even the filler, now botox, it is the
exception to have bruising as opposed to the rule. But
with filler, it's the rule to have bruising. Right, So
we go ahead and do the I can even take
that risk and do botox the day before. But remember

(16:42):
it takes anywhere from two to fourteen days to kick in,
so plan ahead. So certainly botox, Yeah, filler, give it
two weeks. And how about those what Sondra was talking
about lasering, those red spots, how about that one? What
do you think how soon? Yeah? How soon advanced? Could
you do it the same day? Next thing? Yeah? Only
because sometimes people do get swelling from that. So if

(17:05):
you had a lot of capillaries on your face. Let's
say you have roseatia and both of your cheeks and
your nose, and I'm combing through the tissue, not just
getting one or two little capillaries by your nose, well,
then you might swell. I might have to put you
on a steroid for a day or two, or use
steroids for ointment or something on your face. So if

(17:27):
you do that, we want to give it a little
bit of time to settle down, So I give it
two weeks also for the red marks. How about that
light peel that you had? How many three weeks ago? Now, Susan? Yeah,
what do you think? How many? How many weeks before
the wedding do you think she should do that? I'd
say eight? Eight? That's pushing it. Come on, look at you.
I can't even see anything. I think that's what all right?

(17:50):
If you've got eight weeks, I think if you've got
a month, you're okay. But but what happens? You have
the TCAPL that's for brown splotchy pigmentation, and it really
does a nice job even out your skin tone, but
it does leave you a little bit red. I don't
see much red on your face.

Speaker 6 (18:07):
Oh it was a good week of red, though, I have,
so there's some red there where the brown spots came off. Yeah,
and you're because you're going to wear makeup for your affair.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
But yes, and your wedding also as well as your affair.
Oh okay, she looks at me. Okay, well anyway, so yeah,
I think I mean, if you can give it more time, uh,
you know, that's good. Now, how about Susan? How about
a breast augmentation. What do you think a lot of
people do want larger breasts, even to fit into their

(18:37):
wedding gowns. Yeah, I would say, you know, three months minimum,
because you want that swelling to settle down absolutely, even
though you're being covered by clothing. And the same thing
goes for a breast lift, even though you're not going
to be Although some of these gowns you show off,
you know, I've seen some of these things on the internet.
They're really they're Yeah, so you have to be careful.

(19:00):
But remember, with a breast lift, there's an incision around
the arella. You're not going to be showing that. There's
a vertical incision between the arela and the crease underneath.
And then in most cases there's a variable length incision
on the bottom of your breast of which show well,
it depends if you're showing what do they call that

(19:21):
under under boob. I don't think only a one wee
could say that. Now they're okay, they're not going to
show you never know, how about some of these Californian weddings. Well, okay,
so you know, I think with a breast lift you
could certainly do it. You know, a couple a couple
of weeks.

Speaker 6 (19:37):
Yeah, to your point about breastlifts and breast augmentation and
removal of implants, that's a really interesting topic. You know,
my generation had a lot of implants, and doctors encouraged
women to go bigger, and bigger was better, And as
they get older sometimes you look heavier with those implants
and want them removed.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
And also, Susan right now, you know here, let's say
you got your breast implants in twenty years ago. A
lot of women have ruptured implants. I took last week interesting.
I punctured purposely a sailine implant because one woman who
I put in the implants twenty something years ago, her
sailine implant on one side deflated and she didn't want

(20:21):
to go through surgery right now, So it's perfectly acceptable
to just go ahead and puncture the other only sailing.
Of course, you're not going to puncture a gel implant.
That would be bad, that would disperse the gel we want.
But the sailing, you get a drink of water, and
it kind of solves the asymmetry problem for a while.
It doesn't solve the issue that your mammograms are being

(20:41):
obscured by implants or even requiring MRIs. So what happens
if you do want your implants taken out. I've done
so many, so many women, you know, dozens of years ago,
and implants are one they might be rupturing. But very importantly,
those women who are twenty and thirty or so years
old when I put those implants in are now in

(21:02):
their fifties and sixties. They're in the peak years for
breast cancer. And what happens with IMPST what's up in
menopause and menopause. Yeah, but sure they're going to be
in menopause. But with breast cancer, the surveillance is so
critically important. When you're thirty, you're not really looking for
breast cancers, right, But in the fifties, you certainly are.

(21:24):
In sixties, those are peak years and you have to
have a good quality mammogram and if you've got implants in,
it obscures. There was a study anywhere from three to
sixty percent of the breast tissue is obscured with an implant,
you know when you're looking at a mammogram, and so
to stay safe, you have to have MRIs n MRIs.

(21:44):
Looking for breast cancers require gatolenium and injection, and a
lot of people don't want that, and it's most often
not covered by insurance unless there's a lump or something
like that. So because of that, to stay safe, you
need those MRIs And with that, with that, you are
going to then what are you gonna you know, you're

(22:05):
gonna have your implants may be removed. And if you
remove the implants, what are your breasts going to look
like afterwards? And that's an issue. It's a pretty big
issue because if you've had implants in for twenty or
thirty years or even a year, if I take out
those implants, the breast will not look the same. They
will look worse than before you had the implants. They've

(22:29):
stretched out the tissue. It's almost like being pregnant. Your
breast tissue has been kind of compressed a bit. And
usually you're even a little smaller after the implants are
taken out, smaller than when you had before you had
the breast implants put in because the tissue has been
compressed and this skin has been stretched out, and so

(22:50):
now you're drooping. So what do we do? In most cases,
I'll take out the implants and do a breast lift,
and a breast lift is one of those procedures that
I have to tell you that women who have had
breastlifts almost universally say to me, why did I not
do this procedure sooner? So the breastlift is a procedure

(23:11):
we do as an outpatient. Yes, I like to use
general anesesia. I don't like to do this under sedation anesesia.
And the reason I don't like to use sedation is
because it requires local anesthesia and something called rib blocks,
and there's a very small but possible risk of injuring
the lung with and that technique. And so whenever we

(23:31):
decide between general anesesia or sedation anesthesia, we consider all
the risks, not just the risks of the surgery, but
the risks of course to your body and your health,
but also the risks of actually numbing you up. So
for breast surgery, I do like to do this under
general anesthesia. And if you're healthy, a short general anesthetic

(23:53):
by a board certified anesthesiologist is exceedingly safe. In fact,
one of the understated things in all of me. And
by the way, you know, back when I was a
medical student in the nineteen eighties, there was a death
rate in the one in several thousand from general anesesia.
Now it's something like one and half a million. So
it's gotten so much safer, and a lot of it

(24:13):
is the new drugs, and a lot of it is
the new monitoring equipment that we use. So breast lifts
after the implants have been taken out are wonderful procedures.
They're very easy to recover from the implants. Usually we
don't remove the scar tissue around the implants unless there's
a good reason to do it. It's usually considered meddlesome,

(24:34):
so we'll leave it in place. But I buy up
see that to make sure it's okay, and we remove
the implants, lift the breasts, and if you have this
procedure on a Thursday, you're back to work the following Monday.
It is not a disabling and not a particularly uncomfortable procedure.
So that's what I do very frequently. Now I'm taking

(24:55):
out more implants than I'm putting in, and I'm doing
a lot of lifts in this day and age, and
a lot of women, by the way, in the you know,
thirty years ago, twenty years ago had pretty big implants
put in and they're kind of tired with that. You know,
a half hour show goes so quickly, and kind of
like this format, I have to speak a little bit quicker.
We have to get right to the point faster for you.

(25:17):
The phone number is eight hundred three two one zero
seven ten. Write it down so you can call early
next week, right at six o'clock, because you know people
are calling right now. I can't take your call, but
I can see you in the office. The phone number
is two one two seven five three eighteen twenty. I've
got an office on Park Avenue and eighty fifth Street
and in Somerset, New Jersey. And if you're interested in

(25:38):
the products we talk about on the show, go to
Amazon dot com. That's the best way to order those now,
Amazon dot com and just look up my name. And
please don't forget this is a podcast as well as
a radio show. And you can subscribe, and I appreciate
it if you do. Noah, thanks so much for great engineering,
a very fast moving show. Tonight. I'm doctor Arthur Perry Bard,

(26:00):
certified plastic surgeon. Have a great week, Bye bye now.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
The proceeding was a paid podcast iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.