Plastic Surgeons Explain Why Male Breast Tissue Won’t Go Away With Workouts
Some men spend years trying to fix their chest in the gym.
They cut calories. They lift harder. They do endless pushups, chest presses, and cardio. They get lean everywhere else. Arms improve. Shoulders sharpen. Their waist gets smaller.
But the fullness around the nipple stays.
That is the frustration at the center of this episode of The Plastic Surgery Playbook.
In this episode, Erin and Trevor break down gynecomastia, also known as male breast tissue, and explain why it is not always a fitness problem, a discipline problem, or a lack of effort. In many men, true gynecomastia is caused by dense glandular tissue, not just fat. That means diet and exercise may improve the rest of the body while doing almost nothing to flatten the chest.
The episode features insights from Dr. Shim Ching, a board certified plastic surgeon in Honolulu, Hawaii, who explains the biology behind gynecomastia and why male breast reduction requires a precise surgical plan. Dr. Ching notes that many cases are idiopathic, meaning they happen without one clear cause. For many men, the condition begins during puberty and never fully goes away.
The episode also discusses the hormonal mechanics involved. Men naturally produce small amounts of estrogen, and the body can convert testosterone into estrogen through a process called aromatization. When that balance shifts, glandular tissue in the chest can receive a signal to grow. That can happen during puberty, but it may also be influenced by anabolic steroids, marijuana use, certain medications, weight changes, and other hormonal triggers.
Dr. Joseph Hadid is also referenced for his explanation of the key difference between chest fat and glandular tissue. Chest fat tends to feel soft and compressible. True gynecomastia often feels like a firm, rubbery lump behind the areola. The episode compares it to finding a golf ball inside a pillow. That simple distinction helps explain why some men feel stuck, even after years of serious training.
Dr. Lauren Willoughby, featured through the popular medical education channel Talking With Docs, is also discussed. Her perspective reinforces an important point: before treating gynecomastia as a cosmetic issue, men should get a proper medical evaluation. A physician may need to review medical history and use ultrasound imaging to rule out more serious causes, including testicular cancer, abdominal tumors, thyroid problems, or other underlying conditions.
Once serious medical concerns are ruled out, male breast reduction can become a powerful option for the right patient.
The episode explains why expert surgical technique matters. According to Dr. Shim Ching’s breakdown, most gynecomastia cases involve a combination of excess fat and glandular tissue. Fat can often be treated with liposuction. Dense glandular tissue usually needs direct surgical excision. If a surgeon uses only liposuction and leaves the gland behind, the chest may still look puffy. If a surgeon removes only the gland and ignores surrounding fat, the chest may look uneven or unnatural.
The best results often come from combining both techniques.
This episode also explains why scar placement matters so much. Dr. Ching favors placing the incision within the pigmented tissue of the areola, where the scar can blend more naturally with the texture and color of the area. That matters because the goal for many male breast reduction patients is not just a flatter chest. It is the ability to take off a shirt at the beach, pool, gym, or locker room without feeling exposed or self conscious.
The episode also covers one of the most important surgical warnings: the crater effect. If too much glandular tissue is removed from behind the nipple, the areola can collapse inward and create a visible indentation. Dr. Ching emphasizes that expert male breast reduction is not about scooping out every bit of tissue. It is about removing enough to flatten the chest while leaving the right amount behind to support a natural contour.
Recovery is discussed honestly as well. Gynecomastia surgery is real surgery. It may involve anesthesia, swelling, bruising, asymmetry risks, scarring risks, possible nerve changes, and a tight compression garment worn for several weeks to help prevent fluid buildup called seroma. The episode makes clear that compression is not optional. It helps the tissue layers heal together and reduces empty space where fluid can collect.
The emotional side of gynecomastia gets equal attention.
Many men hide this condition for years. They wear extra shirts in hot weather. They avoid pools. They hunch their shoulders. They skip locker rooms. They blame themselves. They think they failed.
But the data tells a different story.
The episode references the 2026 Industry Trend Report from Medic Depot, which notes that men now represent 7 percent of the plastic surgery patient population and that gynecomastia surgery is the top male specific plastic surgery procedure. The report cites more than 26,400 documented male breast reduction cases in 2024, a 10.9 percent increase from the year before.
That rise matters.
It suggests that more men are learning the truth: true gynecomastia is common, biological, and treatable. It is not a reflection of masculinity. It is not proof that someone lacks discipline. It is not something every man can out train.
At the same time, the episode calls out a major gap in the plastic surgery industry. Even as male cosmetic surgery grows, most plastic surgery marketing still focuses almost entirely on women. The transcript references data showing that 94.1 percent of plastic surgery marketing images feature women, while only about 5 percent feature men. That creates an alienating experience for men who are already nervous about asking for help.
Dr. Shim Ching informs us that male breast reduction is his second most common consultation for men at his Honolulu plastic surgery practice. His approach centers on anatomy, balance, hidden scar placement, glandular excision, liposuction when needed, and avoiding overcorrection.
This episode is for any man who has ever looked in the mirror and wondered why his chest will not change, no matter how hard he works.
The answer may not be more discipline.
It may be anatomy.
And once you understand that, the shame starts to lose its grip.
Sources Discussed in This Episode
This episode references and discusses:
* Dr. Shim Ching, board certified plastic surgeon in Honolulu, Hawaii, including his explanation of gynecomastia biology, hormonal triggers, male breast reduction technique, liposuction, glandular excision, hidden areola incision placement, and avoiding the crater effect.
* Dr. Joseph Hadid, including his explanation of the difference between soft chest fat and dense glandular tissue in true gynecomastia. Dr. Hadid practices in Beverly Hills, California.
* Dr. Lauren Willoughby of Talking With Docs, including her discussion of medical evaluation, ultrasound imaging, hormonal causes, potential underlying conditions, surgical risks, recovery, compression garments, seroma prevention, and recurrence risks. Dr. Willoughby practices in the Greater Toronto Area.
* Talking With Docs, used as a medical education source for gynecomastia causes, diagnosis, surgery, and recovery.
* The 2026 Industry Trend Report from Medic Depot, referenced for male plastic surgery growth, gynecomastia surgery volume, the increase in male breast reduction procedures, and the underrepresentation of men in plastic surgery marketing.
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