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Dive into the research topics where Tamir Gil is active.

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Featured researches published by Tamir Gil.


European Urology | 2008

A Critical Analysis of Penile Enhancement Procedures for Patients with Normal Penile Size: Surgical Techniques, Success, and Complications

Yoram Vardi; Yaron Har-Shai; Tamir Gil; Ilan Gruenwald

CONTEXT Most men who request surgical penile enhancement have a normal-sized and fully functional penis but visualize their penises as small (psychological dysmorphism). OBJECTIVES The aim of this review is to describe the various reported techniques and to provide the available scientific data on the success and complication rates of penile enhancement procedures. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION We performed an extensive systematic review based on a search of the MEDLINE database for articles published between 1965 and 2008. The following key words were used: penis, enhancement, enlargement, phalloplasty, reconstruction, girth, lengthening, and augmentation. Only English-language articles that were related to penile surgery and dysmorphobia were sought. We excluded articles in which fewer than five cases were described and articles in which the type of surgical treatment and the outcome were not clear. Of the 176 papers found, 34 were selected and critically analyzed. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS We found only a small number of well-designed and comprehensive studies, and most of the published articles reported data that were obtained from small cohorts of patients. The more recently published studies presented better methodologies and descriptions of the surgical techniques than did the older publications. In general, penile enhancement surgery can cause a 1-2-cm increase in penile length and a 2.5-cm augmentation of penile girth. Unwanted outcomes and complications, namely penile deformity, paradoxical penile shortening, disagreeable scarring, granuloma formation, migration of injected material, and sexual dysfunction were reported frequently in these studies. Disappointing short- and long-term patient satisfaction rates following these procedures were also reported in most studies. CONCLUSIONS To date, the use of cosmetic surgery to enlarge the penis remains highly controversial. There is a lack of any standardization of all described procedures. Indications and outcome measures are poorly defined, and the reported complications are unacceptably high. In our opinion, until new, reliable, and more objective and reproducible data are available, these procedures should be regarded as investigational and patients should be discouraged from undergoing these invasive treatments.


The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds | 2008

Intralesional Cryosurgery for the Treatment of Hypertrophic Scars and Keloids Following Aesthetic Surgery: The Results of a Prospective Observational Study

Yaron Har-Shai; Wifred Brown; Daniel Labbe; Anne Dompmartin; Irina Goldine; Tamir Gil; Issa Mettanes; Norbert Pallua

Hypertrophic scars and keloids following aesthetic surgery, which ignite patient dissatisfaction, are difficult to handle. Intralesional cryosurgery for the treatment of such scars has been introduced. This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of this technology in the treatment of such scars and to assess the reduction of dissatisfaction. Eleven scars (on 11 patients) were treated by intralesional cryosurgery, following breast surgery, otoplasty, face-lifting, and brachioplasty. Each patient scored the concern from the scar and the scar deformity (scale from 1 to 5) prior and following treatment (higher score represents least satisfaction and a severe deformity). The follow-up period was between 3 months and 8 years. The results demonstrated a significant reduction in concern and deformity scores compared with before the cryotreatment (P = .001). The intralesional cryosurgery technique provides the plastic surgeon with an effective instrument to treat hypertrophic scars and keloids following aesthetic surgery, thus reducing the dissatisfaction of patients.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2012

Pain evaluation and control during and following the treatment of hypertrophic scars and keloids by contact and intralesional cryosurgery--a preliminary study.

O. Mirmovich; Tamir Gil; I. Goldin; I. Lavi; Issa Mettanes; Yaron Har-Shai

Background  Intralesional cryosurgery effectively treats hypertrophic scars and keloids (HSK), but pain experienced by the patient during treatment can limit the application of cryosurgery.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2010

Intraoperative muscle electrical stimulation for accurate positioning of the temporalis muscle tendon during dynamic, one-stage lengthening temporalis myoplasty for facial and lip reanimation.

Yaron Har-Shai; Tamir Gil; Issa Metanes; Daniel Labbe

Background: Facial paralysis is a significant functional and aesthetic handicap. Facial reanimation is performed either by two-stage microsurgical methods or by regional one-stage muscle pedicle flaps. Labbé has modified and improved the regional muscle pedicle transfer flaps for facial reanimation (i.e., the lengthening temporalis myoplasty procedure). This true myoplasty technique is capable of producing a coordinated, spontaneous, and symmetrical smile. An intraoperative electrical stimulation of the temporal muscle is proposed to simulate the smile of the paralyzed side on the surgical table. Methods: The intraoperative electrical stimulation of the temporalis muscle, employing direct percutaneous electrode needles or transcutaneous electrical stimulation electrodes, was utilized in 11 primary and four secondary cases with complete facial palsy. The duration of the facial paralysis was up to 12 years. Postoperative follow-up ranged from 3 to 12 months. Results: The insertion points of the temporalis muscle tendon to the nasolabial fold, upper lip, and oral commissure had been changed according to the intraoperative muscle stimulation in six patients of the 11 primary cases (55 percent) and in all four secondary (revisional) cases. A coordinated, spontaneous, and symmetrical smile was achieved in all patients by 3 months after surgery by employing speech therapy and biofeedback. Conclusion: This adjunct intraoperative refinement provides crucial feedback for the surgeon in both primary and secondary facial palsy cases regarding the vector of action of the temporalis muscle and the accuracy of the anchoring points of its tendon, thus enhancing a more coordinated and symmetrical smile.


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 2009

Contralateral Internal Mammary Silicone Lymphadenopathy Imitates Breast Cancer Metastasis

Tamir Gil; Issa Mettanes; Boaz Aman; Amir Taran; Oren Shoshani; Lael Anson Best; Inna Naroditsky; Yaron Har-Shai

This case report presents a unique, late complication of breast reconstruction surgery. A woman, who underwent left mastectomy and several reconstruction procedures with silicone implants presented with symptomatic enlarged internal mammary lymph nodes on her contralateral side. The nodes, which were suspicious for breast cancer metastasis on positron-emission tomographic computed tomography, were removed by thoracoscopy. The histopathologic result revealed silicone adenopathy. This report is particularly interesting because it presents a rare case in which silicone has migrated to the contralateral internal mammary nodes. This complication was not previously documented in the medical literature and serves as a possible differential diagnosis to metastatic breast cancer.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2007

Mobile Phone-Triggered Thermal Burns in the Presence of Supplemental Oxygen

Tamir Gil; Issa Metanes; Yaron Har-Shai

In this case report, we present a patient who used a nasal cannula for oxygen supplementation and suffered deep, second-degree burns to his nose and left leg when an electrical spark shot out of the cables connection socket while the cellular phone was ringing and the cable was, simultaneously, being disconnected from the socket. The cellular phone, a device commonly thought by many people to be both useful and safe, thus has the potential to serve as a heat source that might ignite and cause burns.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2015

A prospective case–control study of non‐healing wounds of the lower limbs – the value of biopsies for ulcerating carcinoma

Tamir Gil; Y. Pistunovich; M. Kulikovsky; I. Elmalah; Y. Krausz; Issa Mettanes; I. Lavi; Yaron Har-Shai

In some leg ulcer patients there is cancer that is responsible for lack of healing of such a wound.


International Journal of Dermatology | 2016

Intralesional cryosurgery for the treatment of basal cell carcinoma of the lower extremities in elderly subjects: a feasibility study

Yaron Har-Shai; Adir Sommer; Tamir Gil; Judit Krausz; Nir Gal-Or; Issa Mettanes; Idit Lavi; Nir Eyal; Leonid Brizgalin; Amir Taran; Lior Har-Shai; Irit Elmalach

Incidences of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) on the lower extremities in elderly patients are rising. Surgical approaches to the treatment of BCC are subject to possible difficulties in healing, failure of skin grafts, and wound infection. This study assessed the efficacy of intralesional cryosurgery in the treatment of BCC of the lower limbs in elderly patients.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2008

Six tissue expansion sessions of the scalp for reconstruction of post-burn alopecia.

Tamir Gil; Issa Metanes; Boaz Aman; Amir Taran; Shraga Mayblum; Tochman Izhak; Yaron Har-Shai

Postburn scalp alopecia has severe aesthetic and psychological implications. We describe herein a case of a 16-year-old girl suffering from postburn scalp alopecia consisting of approximately 70% of her scalp, with only some residual patches of hair in her left occipital and nuchal areas. The patient underwent six serial tissue expansions during a period of 8 years, thereby enabling coverage of a significant part of the scalp area, with advancement of the hair line laterally and anteriorly. The outcome of this case serves to reinforce the practice of multiple tissue expansion to the scalp, with minimal hair loss and some hair thinning, resulting in a satisfactory aesthetic outcome.


Journal of Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery | 2010

Atypical fibroxanthoma of the scalp following hair transplantation in a 35-year-old male

Tamir Gil; E. Sabo; H. Kerner; I. Metanes; Yaron Har-Shai

Atypical fibroxanthoma (AFX) is an uncommon spindle cell neoplasm of the elderly. This case report presents an atypical case of AFX of the scalp 8 years after hair transplantation in a 35-year-old male patient. Possible synergistic effects of previous sun exposure radiation to the scalp, together with the thermal and radiation injury of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) laser, might explain the mechanisms of the development of AFX at such an early age. To the best of our knowledge, this case report is the first description in the medical literature of development of skin malignancy on a hair-transplanted scalp.

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Yaron Har-Shai

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Issa Mettanes

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Issa Metanes

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Nir Gal-Or

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Amir Taran

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Aharon Amir

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Ilan Gruenwald

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Lior Har-Shai

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Yoram Vardi

Rappaport Faculty of Medicine

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