Silicone is a polymer that has a wide range of uses in personal care products and surgical implants. It can be found in liquid, gel, or rubber-like solid forms. Learn about its advantages and its use in breast implants.

Advantages

Silicone is made of silicon, oxygen, and other elements, usually carbon and hydrogen. Silicone has many advantages, including:

  • Stable at high temperature
  • Resistant to aging
  • Resistant to sunlight
  • Resistant to moisture
  • Resistant to extremes in temperature
  • Uses of Silicone

Lalamusa Silicone Breast Implants

Silicone appears in approximately half of all makeup, hair, skin, and underarm products. The gel form of silicone is used in bandages and dressings and breast, testicle, and pectoral implants.
Silicone is widely used during ophthalmic procedures. It has been used to replace vitreous fluid after a vitrectomy, serve as intraocular lenses during a cataract procedure, as punctal plugs for dry eye surgery, and in treatment for retinal detachment.

Silicone Breast Implants

The most well-known use of silicone is as breast implants for breast surgery. Breast implants are medical devices implanted under the breast tissue or muscle of the chest to either increase breast size or help reconstruct the breast. Breast implants are either saline-filled or silicone gel-filled. Both types of implants have a silicone outer shell.
For patients with silicone gel-filled breast implants, it is recommended that they obtain an MRI screening for silent rupture three years after implantation and every two years afterward. A silent rupture is the leakage of silicone from the implant into the tissue that forms around the implant. A ruptured silicone breast implant can cause breast pain or changes in the shape of the breast.

Risks

The risks for silicone and saline breast implants are similar. 

  • Capsular contracture
  • Pain in the breast
  • Infection
  • Numbness in the nipple
  • Leakage or rupture of the implant

To correct some of these complications, additional surgery may be required. Breast implants are not meant to last a lifetime, and the longer you have them, the more likely it is that you will need surgery to remove or replace them. 

Silicone-Breast-Implants

Safety

 They say there is, "no apparent association between silicone gel-filled breast implants and connective tissue disease, breast cancer, or reproductive problems." But they note that they need larger and longer studies to rule these out.
Systematic reviews of the safety of silicone breast implants show that there are few randomized controlled trials (RCT) that are of good quality to assess. This is despite the huge numbers of women who get silicone breast implants either for breast reconstruction or for breast augmentation.
The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews review of whether there was a difference in outcomes between saline-filled and silicone-filled breast implants for breast reconstruction likewise found they didn't have enough evidence to draw conclusions or for surgeons to properly advise women about which was best, "Despite the central role of breast reconstruction in women with breast cancer, the best implants to use in reconstructive surgery have been studied rarely in the context of RCTs. Furthermore, the quality of these studies and the overall evidence they provide is largely unsatisfactory.