How Breast Reduction Surgery Dramatically Improved One Woman's Health

Marks shows off her new look after her breast reduction, a procedure she says improved her quality of life “by 100 percent.” (Debbie Porter Photography)

A few weeks ago, Kerisha Marks walked a charity 5K in 49 minutes — a personal best that prompted her to quip on Facebook, “These breasts are made for walking.” In the past, the same distance would have taken her over an hour and a half to complete. What changed? She had a breast reduction.

Before the October procedure, Marks, 40, wore a size 36NNN bra. “I’ve always had really large breasts,” she told Yahoo Health. “I was an H cup in high school.”

But in 2007, after Marks had a stillborn baby, her breasts began to grow at an increasingly rapid rate, until she reached her current size. “I wondered if it was something medical, but everybody just said it was genetic,” Marks said. “My cousin had very large breasts. So did my aunt. They opted to have surgery years ago, but I was not mentally prepared for surgery.”

For seven years, Kerisha Marks struggled to find size 36NNN bras. Now, after surgery, she feels “normal” for the first time. (Debbie Porter Photography) 

However, the weight of her breasts was taking an undeniable toll on her both physically and emotionally. There were the hurtful — often inappropriate — comments from strangers, usually men. And, of course, back spasms and migraines from the pain. Once, when Marks took off her bra, the strain of her unsupported breasts caused her to pull a muscle. “I thought I was having a heart attack,” she said.

Not surprisingly, her breasts restricted her ability to exercise. “There was never a sports bra big enough to fit me,” Marks recalled. “I had 15 pounds removed — that’s like an eight-pound baby on one side and seven-pound baby on the other. That slows you down.”

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It was an incident this past summer that finally prompted Marks to contact Dr. Franklin Rose, a renowned plastic surgeon in Houston, Texas. She noticed a lump in her armpit, and afraid that it was cancerous, she scheduled a mammogram. “It turned out the lump was breast tissue,” Marks said. “The breast tissue didn’t have anywhere else to go, so it started to go underneath my armpit.” That’s when she knew it was time to take the leap and schedule a surgery. “I was turning 40, and I just started to think about regret,” she said. “I didn’t want to get in my 60s and my breasts be sitting in my lap, and say, ‘I wish I’d done something when I was younger.’”

Kerisha Marks, before surgery (Courtesy of Dr. Franklin Rose)

Marks had long assumed that she just had large breasts, but Rose diagnosed her with “gigantomastia,” a condition that can occur in women or men, in which there is massive overgrowth of the breasts. “[Marks’s] breasts were literally about the size of three basketballs,” Rose told Yahoo Health. “I’ve done about 8,000 breast procedures — augmentations, lifts, reductions — and hers were really the largest breasts I’ve ever come across in clinical practice in over 30 years.”

The medical community hasn’t agreed on a threshold at which large breasts cross over to gigantomastia, which Rose estimates occurs in about 8 percent of women. Some consider anything beyond an EEE bra size to be gigantomastia. One study defined the condition by weight: If a woman’s breasts exceed 3 percent of her body weight, she should be diagnosed with gigantomastia, the researchers said. “Some plastic surgeons say that if you can anticipate removing 1,500 grams per breast, which is a little over three pounds, that’s gigantomastia,” said Dr. Kendall Roehl, a board-certified plastic surgeon. “Others would say it has to be more than 2,000 grams. So there is no true way to definitively diagnose it.”

The cause of the condition is equally unclear, although doctors speculate that both genetics and hormones play a role. “It’s not really well understood,” said Rose. What is painfully obvious is the physical harm that the condition can cause. “Patients get back pain, neck pain,” he said. “[Marks] would have developed severe spinal curvature, known as kyphosis, which means ‘hunchback.’ She would have literally been stooped at her waist, because nobody can support all of that extra weight for an extended period of time.”

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Perhaps because the condition is so ill-defined — and also because breast reduction is sometimes deemed a cosmetic procedure — health insurance providers often refuse to cover surgery for women with gigantomastia. In fact, Marks was denied coverage for a breast reduction in the past, which is why Rose offered to perform the procedure for free. “The insurance carriers have ever-changing targets,” Rose said. “When I started practicing, a 350-, 400-gram reduction per breast would be considered medically necessary.” That number keeps growing, he said.

Several weeks after the surgery, how does Marks feel? “When I first got home, I did cry. I mourned them,” she admitted, comparing the loss she felt to a bad divorce or even a death. “They were with me my entire adult life, so looking in the mirror and not seeing them was a bit shocking.” But now she knows with 100 percent certainty that she made the right decision. “It’s like my light was dimmed, and now it’s shining bright, because I feel normal,” she told Yahoo Health. “I want to go out to Victoria’s Secret, somewhere I can get a nice, beautiful bra. I’m waiting for that ultimate moment.”