Solange Magnano Pictures Before Gluteoplasty: Miss Argentina Died

by Amy Judd | December 1, 2009 at 12:51 pm
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There are some Solange Magnano pictures that are on the internet and all of them show a happy and healthy model, who was Miss Argentina in 1994 and was still a working model today. But Solange Magnano died from a gluteoplasty procedure and many are left wondering why she would do that when it wasn't necessary to her health. Some photos of Solange Magnano - Solange Magnano photo 1, Solange Magnano photo 2, Solange Magnano photo 3, Solange Magnano photo 4.

Roberto Piazza, a friend of Magnano, tells press: “This woman who had everything is dead because she wanted to have a slightly firmer [body].” “She only underwent the procedure because she thought it was no big deal” added friend Guillermo Azar.

As our previous story reports, she was in critical condition for three days following the gluteoplasty, after which she died on Sunday. Her funeral was held on Monday in San Francisco and was attended by over 300 people.

A gluetoplasty is a procedure that places implants in the buttocks to make them appear fuller and to lift them up.

After the gluteoplasty, she was rushed to hospital with acute respiratory deficiency, and she suffered an embolism on Sunday and her close friend Mr. Piazza said:

“She was perfect, she didn’t need any surgery,” he continued. “She took care of herself a lot, went to the gym, had everything in its place, perfect measurements, a divine little waist. Last year she had surgery on her breasts and they came out perfect, but she did not need this butt surgery. It was stupid what she did, I don’t understand it.

There are reports that the procedure may not have been performed correctly, although cosmetic surgeons said that although this outcome is rare, complications can happen.

In the case of Solange Magnano, instead of a transfer of her own fat to lift her buttocks, she had injections of polimetilmetacrilate, which is cheaper and is injected in to the muscle. It has only been used for the past two years however.

“It can happen that the product enters a capillary,” Dr Carlos Reilly, vice president of SACPER, told the Argentine newspaper Clarin. “It is a procedure which has risks and must be inserted into very specific places.”

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