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WBA Champion Stephanie Han Defends Her Title Three Months After a Motiva Preservé Breast Augmentation at Southwest Plastic Surgery

On Saturday, May 30, in front of a hometown crowd at the El Paso County Coliseum and a national audience on ESPN, Stephanie “The Enforcer” Han defended her WBA lightweight world title against Holly Holm and won by decision, improving to 13-0. About four months earlier, she had a breast augmentation at Southwest Plastic Surgery. We sat down with Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, the practice’s medical director, and with Stephanie, to talk through it.

WBA lightweight champion and El Paso police officer Stephanie Han, a Motiva Preserve breast augmentation patient of Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, at Southwest Plastic Surgery in El Paso, Texas.

Stephanie, Why Did You Decide to Do This?

Stephanie: “It’s something I’ve wanted to do for a very long time, and I always held back because of the stigma, that you shouldn’t do it because it’s going to affect your performance as a professional fighter. But I’m doing it for myself. At the end of the day, I’m still Stephanie Han. I’m still a world champion boxer, still a police officer, still a mother of two, still a woman of God. It doesn’t change who I am.”

You’re a Mom of Two Who Breastfed Both. How Did That Factor In?

Stephanie: “I’m a mom of two, and I breastfed both of my kids. No one tells you your breasts won’t be the same afterward. I could do a million push-ups and it would not change this. It was probably my biggest insecurity, and I knew this would give me back my confidence.”

Dr. Agullo, What Did Her Case Take to Plan?

Dr. Agullo: The surgery itself was straightforward; she is in great shape with a very healthy lifestyle. The interesting part was her asymmetry, which is typical. On the Chrysalix 3D simulation we planned a 265cc Demi Ergonomix on the right and a 315cc Full Ergonomix on the left, and the Motiva Ergonomix implants move with the body, which gives a really natural, symmetric result. The most demanding part was the recovery. She is a champion boxer and a police officer, and the goal was to get her back to work the next day and back to her training camp within two weeks, and we achieved both.

What Did the Procedure Involve?

Dr. Agullo: We placed the implants with the Motiva Preservé technique. We make a small incision in the fold, create the pocket above the muscle and behind the breast gland, with no cutting and no electrocautery. We use a balloon to open the space, so the pocket is defined by the breast’s own ligaments, which means we preserve the nerves and arteries and do not need a mesh. It was conscious sedation, the whole operation was less than thirty minutes, and we used EXPAREL, a long-acting local placed between the ribs that numbs the breast for the first three days. She woke up talking, with no pain, able to raise her arms over her head, and went home within an hour.

Stephanie, What Was the Recovery Like?

Stephanie: “Dr. Agullo said I’d be fully recovered after two weeks, and I didn’t believe it until it happened. Maybe a little discomfort for about three days, and after that it felt amazing. It’s been about four months and it truly feels like I didn’t get them done. Today I sparred 12 rounds with no pain, I run seven miles easily, and it feels like nothing, like part of my body.”

She Never Told Her Coach. What Does That Tell You?

Dr. Agullo: I was surprised, but it made for an interesting test, because her coach was blinded to it. He watched her train and spar through the whole camp toward the title defense and thought she was in the best shape he had ever seen. That tells me the augmentation did not get in the way of her performance or her range of motion. And to be clear, the implants did not make her a better fighter. They boosted her confidence enormously, but the point is that they did not affect her fighting at all.

How Did the MedSpa Support Her Recovery?

Dr. Agullo: Southwest Plastic Surgery runs a clinic and a MedSpa under one roof, and the two meet during recovery. ElixirMD uses LED light therapy, which is FDA cleared and one of the more powerful tools we have for bringing down swelling, redness, and inflammation faster. Lymphatic drainage massage moves the edema out, helps avoid fibrosis, and gets patients up and moving sooner, and it feels great. We also routinely use IV drips, because the chance of dehydration after surgery is high, and we can add supplements, peptides, and vitamins based on what the patient needs. It is a holistic approach that makes recovery faster, better, and more comfortable, which matters even more for an athlete on the clock. The broader procedure details are on our breast augmentation page.

Stephanie, How Do You Feel About the Result?

Stephanie: “They’re so symmetrical, so nice and perky. It’s taken my confidence from probably a six to a ten. I feel beautiful, I feel strong, I feel confident. I love them, I truly do.”

Is This Recovery Realistic for Everyone?

Dr. Agullo: It is realistic for most women having a Preservé augmentation on its own. If they are not having anything else done, I expect them back to work within one to three days and back in the gym after about two weeks. If a patient also needs a breast lift, or is having liposuction or a mommy makeover with a tummy tuck, that changes everything, and the recovery is dictated by those other procedures. We plan every case around the patient in front of us. For the full clinical breakdown, see Dr. Agullo’s interview on agulloplasticsurgery.com, and for the editorial version, his post on drworldwide.com.

Stephanie, Any Advice for Someone Considering This?

Stephanie: “This is one of the things I do not regret at all, and I wish I’d done it sooner. Don’t listen to the stigma. You can still be strong, you can still be beautiful, and you can still perform at 100 percent. To all the female athletes, especially women champion boxers, and especially the moms who breastfed, if you have two weeks, you can do it.”

About Dr. Frank Agullo

Dr. Frank Agullo is double board-certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery and the American Board of Surgery, a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and completed his plastic surgery fellowship at Mayo Clinic. He is a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and an Affiliate Professor at the University of Texas at El Paso. He has been named a Castle Connolly Top Doctor for thirteen consecutive years and was inducted into the Texas Super Doctors Hall of Fame in 2025. He is one of the first certified users of the Motiva Preservé breast augmentation system, trained directly by Motiva.

Schedule a Motiva Preservé Consultation at Southwest Plastic Surgery

If you have delayed a breast augmentation because you cannot afford weeks away from training or work, the Southwest Plastic Surgery team can tell you whether Motiva Preservé fits your anatomy and your goals, what implants make sense for your frame, and where the MedSpa side can support your recovery before and after surgery.

Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book a consultation online. Follow Dr. Agullo on social at @RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook. #StayBeautiful

Southwest Plastic Surgery Founder Dr. Frank Agullo Publishes “Preservation, Not Minimalism” on Connectively

Southwest Plastic Surgery founder Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, in black scrubs holding a hand mirror for a patient during a consultation in El Paso, Texas, featured image for the Preservation, Not Minimalism Connectively-companion blog post.

Southwest Plastic Surgery Founder Dr. Frank Agullo Publishes “Preservation, Not Minimalism” on Connectively

Southwest Plastic Surgery is proud to share the latest bylined commentary from our founder and medical director, Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, published May 19, 2026, by Connectively.

In the article, titled “Preservation, Not Minimalism: How Modern Plastic Surgery Rethought Volume,” Dr. Agullo (known internationally as Dr. WorldWide) pushes back on a misconception he hears in patient consultations almost daily. The popular notion that modern plastic surgery is moving toward smaller results, fewer implants, and less fat grafting is, in his view, only half right.

“Look, patients ask me about this every week,” Dr. Agullo said in a recent practice meeting. “The story they have heard is that the field is going minimal. That is not what is happening in my OR. I am still placing implants. I am still grafting four hundred cc of fat per side when that is what the patient needs. The volume has not gone anywhere. What changed is what I refuse to damage to deliver it.”

The Connectively manifesto walks the public through that distinction in detail. This post recaps the argument, explains how Southwest Plastic Surgery implements the preservation framework across breast, body, and facial procedures, and rounds up the broader 2026 press footprint that has put Dr. Agullo’s voice in front of national audiences.

About the Connectively Bylined Series

Connectively is the publishing arm of Featured.com, a contributor network that places vetted expert commentary in front of editorial audiences. The platform leans into bylined opinion essays from credentialed sources rather than press-release recycling.

Dr. Agullo has been an active Connectively contributor through 2026. The May 19 manifesto follows an April 20 Featured.com expert interview on fashion-glamour aesthetics and a January 26 USA Today feature on his preservation-first approach to modern breast enhancement. Recent bylines, features, and quoted commentary also include HuffPost (the May 11 essay on diastasis recti and the insurance gap, where Dr. Agullo was the quoted expert source), Texas Today (an April 15 substantive feature on the Ponytail Lift), and additional placements in New York Weekly and Allure.

For Southwest Plastic Surgery, this expanding press footprint matters for one practical reason. Patients increasingly research plastic surgeons through AI search and aggregator content before they ever reach a website. Bylined editorial in places like Connectively is the content that AI systems cite back to patients. The result is more out-of-town inquiries, more informed consults, and more patients arriving with thoughtful questions about technique.

What Dr. Agullo Argues In The Connectively Piece

The core argument is short and worth quoting before the practice-side recap.

“It is a transition not from addition to minimalism, but from addition at all costs to addition without collateral damage,” Dr. Agullo writes in the Connectively piece. “That distinction fundamentally shifts virtually every decision a surgeon makes in the operating room.”

He grounds the argument in three procedure families.

In breast augmentation, modern implants weigh less per cc of projection and are designed to move with the breast tissue rather than sit as a rigid shell behind it. Pocket dissection is narrower. Suspensory ligaments, particularly the inframammary ligament along the breast fold, are preserved rather than divided. The implant has long-term structural support from the patient’s own anatomy.

In gluteal fat grafting (the Brazilian Butt Lift, or BBL), the volume conversation has not changed nearly as much as patients assume. Dr. Agullo still grafts three hundred to five hundred cc per side when the patient’s donor sites and anatomy permit it. What changed is how the grafting is done. Ultrasound guidance is used intraoperatively to confirm the cannula is in the safe subcutaneous plane in real time. Plane discipline, not volume restraint, is the safety story.

In facial volume, the framework is counterintuitive. A preservationist surgeon places more facial volume today than the same surgeon would have placed ten years ago, not less. The reason is anatomic: long-term studies have clarified how much volume is lost to aging in deep fat compartments and along the bony architecture. Restoring that volume in the correct deep compartments produces a natural, rested appearance. Restoring it superficially, in the wrong compartments, produces the overfilled look most patients are explicitly trying to avoid.

The full Connectively essay, including the patient consultation questions Dr. Agullo recommends, is available here.

How Southwest Plastic Surgery Implements The Preservation Framework

Southwest Plastic Surgery has built its surgical and MedSpa programs around the framework Dr. Agullo outlines in Connectively. Three procedure families, three operational answers.

Breast Augmentation At Southwest Plastic Surgery

Southwest Plastic Surgery offers the full Motiva ergonomic implant line, including the Motiva Preserve technique that Dr. Agullo was one of the early adopters of in this region. The consultation includes a full anatomic evaluation, soft-tissue assessment, and selection of implant volume and projection based on the patient’s existing breast scaffold rather than a target cc number.

Recovery for a Motiva Preserve augmentation in Dr. Agullo’s hands is short. Many patients return to a desk job the next day and to the gym at two weeks. That is not marketing language. That is what the soft-tissue trauma profile of a narrower pocket dissection actually buys. Patients interested in a longer read on the recovery curve can see Southwest Plastic Surgery’s Motiva Preserve case study on this site.

Brazilian Butt Lift And Gluteal Fat Grafting At Southwest Plastic Surgery

Every Brazilian Butt Lift performed by Dr. Agullo is ultrasound-guided. The probe is on the patient during the case. Cannula position, fascia, and plane are confirmed visually in real time. Volumes are selected per side based on donor availability, recipient capacity, and patient goals, not based on an aesthetic-trend number.

“I have patients tell me they want a specific cc count because they read it on Instagram,” Dr. Agullo said. “That is not how I plan a case. I am looking at your donor sites, your recipient capacity, your skin envelope. The cc count comes out of the anatomic plan, not the other way around. And every milliliter goes through ultrasound.”

Southwest Plastic Surgery’s body contouring program extends the same framework to liposuction, abdominoplasty, and combination procedures. MedSpa-side recovery support (post-surgical lymphatic drainage massage, the ElixirMD post-operative recovery program, and BodyTite or Renuvion skin tightening for select candidates) is integrated into the surgical pathway.

Facelift And Facial Volume Restoration At Southwest Plastic Surgery

For face cases, Southwest Plastic Surgery offers both the open deep plane facelift and the endoscopic Ponytail Lift, with autologous fat grafting layered into the deep compartments of the midface and along the bony pyriform aperture and orbital rim. Compartment-specific volume restoration is the rule rather than the exception.

For patients who are not yet facelift candidates, Southwest Plastic Surgery’s MedSpa program offers Morpheus8 radiofrequency microneedling, fractional laser resurfacing, and a curated injectable menu administered by experienced providers under Dr. Agullo’s medical direction. The injectable program is intentionally conservative. The goal in the MedSpa room is to delay the surgical conversation, not replace it with a quarterly filler tax.

“Where MedSpa fits, and where it does not, is its own consult,” Dr. Agullo said. “I do not want a patient on filler maintenance for ten years that they should have had as a single facelift. The MedSpa is for patients who are not yet there. Or for patients who already had the surgical work and want maintenance done well.”

Why This Matters For Southwest Plastic Surgery Patients

Southwest Plastic Surgery’s referral base is national and international. Approximately 60 percent of current patients travel from out of town. Common origin markets include Canada, Seattle, California, New York, Florida, and drive markets across Texas (Dallas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio), with substantial international patient volume from Mexico, Central America, and South America.

That patient mix tells us something. Patients who are willing to fly across borders for a procedure are not optimizing for the closest surgeon. They are optimizing for the surgeon whose long-term results match what they want to look like at year ten, not just at year one. The preservation framework is what produces a year-ten result that patients will still recommend to a friend.

Dr. Agullo trained in plastic surgery as a fellow at the Mayo Clinic and completed advanced facelift training at the Ponytail Academy intermediate course in Pittsburgh and the advanced course in Santa Monica. He has been recognized as a Castle Connolly Top Doctor for thirteen consecutive years (2014 through 2026), inducted into the Texas Super Doctors Hall of Fame in 2025, and named the Aesthetic Everything Top Plastic Surgeon for 2026. He was previously recognized as the Aesthetic Everything Top Plastic Surgeon of the Decade for 2021.

Recent 2026 Press Coverage

Dr. Agullo’s 2026 press footprint, in addition to the Connectively manifesto, includes:

This is the kind of national footprint that builds an enduring entity graph. Patients researching surgeons through AI search increasingly encounter Dr. Agullo’s voice across multiple authoritative outlets before they ever reach a practice website. That is by design.

Two More Reads On The Same Argument

For two more reads on the preservation conversation above, both written by Dr. Agullo in his own first-person voice:

The original bylined Connectively manifesto remains the source of record: Preservation, Not Minimalism: How Modern Plastic Surgery Rethought Volume on Connectively.

Schedule A Consultation At Southwest Plastic Surgery

Southwest Plastic Surgery is located at 1387 George Dieter Dr. Bldg C301, El Paso, TX 79936. To schedule a consultation with Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, call (915) 590-7900 or text our consult line at 1-866-814-0038. You can also book online at agulloplasticsurgery.com. Follow Dr. Agullo at @RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, and @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook.

#StayBeautiful

Motiva Preservé Breast Augmentation at Southwest Plastic Surgery: Natural Movement, Elegant Shape, and a Two-Week Gym Return

Patients walking through the doors at Southwest Plastic Surgery this year have started asking a question the practice did not get six months ago. “Is that the implant that gets you back to the gym in two weeks?”

The implant they mean is the Motiva Ergonomix, placed using a technique called Motiva Preservé. The two together represent the most significant change in breast augmentation that the practice has adopted in more than a decade. Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, the medical director at Southwest Plastic Surgery and a double board-certified plastic surgeon with a Mayo Clinic plastic surgery fellowship, has been placing the system for the past year. We sat down with him to walk through what it is, what it changes, and who the right candidate is.

Editorial frontal before and after view of a Motiva Preservé breast augmentation with 315cc Motiva Ergonomix Full implants on a slim athletic young woman patient wearing a Dr. Worldwide bikini, performed by Dr. Frank Agullo, MD, FACS, double board-certified plastic surgeon at Southwest Plastic Surgery in El Paso, Texas.

What Preservation Means When a Plastic Surgeon Says It

“Look, preservation isn’t a marketing word in this context,” Dr. Agullo said. “It’s a commitment in the operating room. The breast tissue, the muscle attachments, the lymphatic drainage, the neural anatomy. All of it gets handled like it matters, because it does. The technique was designed around minimizing what we touch.”

In practical terms, that means a smaller incision (2.5 to 3 centimeters, hidden in the natural fold under the breast), no release of the pectoralis muscle at all (the implant sits in front of it, held by the breast’s own ligaments), and a no-touch funnel that allows the implant to drop into its pocket without contacting skin on the way in.

The result is a recovery curve that the practice’s patients have described, somewhat sheepishly, as “weirdly easy.” Less swelling. Less tightness. Less of the bruised-rib soreness that defines the first week of a traditional submuscular augmentation.

Worth noting on the anesthetic side: the case in the photos on this page was performed under light sedation rather than general anesthesia, and the operation itself was completed in under an hour. The patient was discharged from our accredited surgical suite the same morning. The shorter anesthetic exposure is part of why the recovery profile compresses.

“The day after a traditional submuscular augmentation, patients describe themselves as wrecked,” Dr. Agullo said. “After Preservé, they describe themselves as sore. Two different words, two different recoveries. Honestly, that single change in how patients answer the post-op day-one question has been the most striking part of adopting this technique.”

The Implant: Motiva Ergonomix Full, 315cc in This Case

The Motiva Ergonomix is a sixth-generation silicone gel implant produced by Motiva (a division of Establishment Labs), the company that earned FDA approval for its silicone implants in 2024 after years of leading the implant market in Latin America and Europe. The implant uses ProgressiveGel Ultima inside the shell and a SmoothSilk surface on the outside that has been shown in published data to lower the rate of capsular contracture compared to older textured surfaces.

The shape is what differentiates the Ergonomix line. The gel inside is engineered to behave the way breast tissue does. Upright, the implant takes on a teardrop drape that reads as natural anatomy. Supine (lying on the back), it flattens and rounds the way real tissue would.

“That’s what patients react to when they see results,” Dr. Agullo said. “It’s not the volume. It’s how the volume behaves when she sits up, when she lies down, when she walks. The implant moves with her. Older implants don’t.”

The Full profile is one of three Ergonomix projection options Motiva offers in the United States (Mini, Demi, and Full). For a slim athletic patient who wants visible projection but a natural silhouette, Full sits at the upper end of the range. The patient in the photos on this page received 315cc, sized in the office before surgery using the Motiva Sizers and a long conversation about her goals. The practice’s full breast augmentation procedure page covers the broader category and the consultation process.

Oblique 45-degree before and after view of the same 315cc Motiva Preservé breast augmentation case, showing projection from a three-quarter angle.

A Recovery Ladder That Holds Up

The recovery numbers patients keep asking about are, in Dr. Agullo’s words, the part that drove him to adopt the system. “I kept hearing the manufacturer claims and I didn’t believe them. So I went and trained on the technique, placed it in my own practice, and started keeping notes. The recovery profile is real.”

For a patient with this body type and implant choice, the Preservé recovery ladder at Southwest Plastic Surgery looks like this:

Time Activity
Day 1 Back to desk work, off the heaviest pain medication, sleeping upright
Day 7 Showering normally, light walking, sleeping however she wants
Week 2 Back to lower-body gym programming and short runs, with a sports bra
Week 3 Compression bra off
Week 4 Full upper-body lifting with surgical clearance
Week 6 Implant in final pocket position, surgical recovery complete

“None of those numbers come from a brochure,” Dr. Agullo said. “I keep notes on every Preservé patient I place. The recovery times have not slipped. That’s the difference between a marketing claim and a real change in the operating room.”

How Preservé Compares to a Traditional Submuscular Augmentation

For patients comparing options, the short version:

Question Traditional Submuscular Motiva Preservé
Incision length 4 to 5 cm 2.5 to 3 cm
Muscle release Significant None (implant in front of the muscle)
Insertion technique Direct hand placement No-touch funnel preferred
Back to desk work 5 to 7 days 1 to 2 days
Back to upper-body lifting 6 to 8 weeks 2 to 3 weeks
Compression bra 4 to 6 weeks 2 to 3 weeks
Implant surface Smooth or textured (varies by brand) SmoothSilk
Implant shape behavior Round or shaped, fixed Ergonomic, position-responsive

Patients should understand that the technique is more demanding than a traditional submuscular augmentation, and the surgeon’s volume with the specific Motiva system matters. “I trained directly on the technique before I placed an implant in a patient,” Dr. Agullo said. “I would not place a Motiva implant the way I place every other implant in my OR. The technique is different and the implant rewards the difference.”

Side profile before and after view of the same 315cc Motiva Preservé breast augmentation case, showing natural drape and projection from a lateral angle.

Where MedSpa Fits, and Where It Does Not

Southwest Plastic Surgery operates a clinic and a MedSpa under one roof. The MedSpa side handles Botox, fillers, Morpheus8 RF microneedling, BBL Forever Young, ElixirMD post-procedure recovery, laser resurfacing, hair restoration, and a regenerative aesthetics line that now includes YOU by Acorn.

For Preservé patients, the MedSpa intersects the surgical recovery in a specific way. ElixirMD post-procedure recovery is the practice’s structured early-recovery program. Lymphatic drainage massage and topical recovery support are layered in for patients who want the smoothest possible swelling curve. IV hydration and nutrient drips are also available through the MedSpa to support recovery, both in the days after surgery and during the demands of athletic training. Patients who want their decolletage skin in optimal condition before surgery often start a Morpheus8 or microneedling protocol on the chest weeks or months in advance.

“What MedSpa is not, in the breast augmentation conversation, is a replacement for surgery,” Dr. Agullo said. “Filler in the breast isn’t a thing we offer here. We do real anatomy with real implants, and we use the MedSpa side to support the surgical recovery and the long-arc plan.”

Who Is the Right Candidate

The patient profile shown in the photos on this page is, in Dr. Agullo’s framing, one of the easier candidates to plan for. A young woman with adequate skin envelope, a defined inframammary fold, and goals that lean toward natural proportion rather than dramatic enlargement.

Patients with significant ptosis (drooping) may need a breast lift in addition to the augmentation. Patients with a history of prior augmentations and capsule issues need a more nuanced revision conversation. Patients with very thin tissue may need a different planning approach, with implant size and pocket choice tailored to their anatomy.

“Preservé is the default I now reach for first,” Dr. Agullo said. “But the planning is still individual. The right answer for the patient in front of me is the only answer that matters.”

Clinical frontal before and after view of the same 315cc Motiva Preservé breast augmentation case, showing symmetry and natural shape.

About Dr. Frank Agullo

Dr. Frank Agullo is double board-certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery and the American Board of Surgery. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, completed his plastic surgery fellowship at Mayo Clinic, and is a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center as well as an Affiliate Professor at the University of Texas at El Paso. He has been named a Castle Connolly Top Doctor for thirteen consecutive years, was inducted into the Texas Super Doctors Hall of Fame in 2025, and was named Aesthetic Everything Top Plastic Surgeon for 2026. Southwest Plastic Surgery is an early adopter, in West Texas, of the Motiva Preservé breast augmentation system.

Two More Reads From Dr. Agullo Himself

For a more editorial take on Motiva Preservé, see his piece on drworldwide.com: Back to the Gym in Two Weeks: Motiva Preservé and What Preservation Surgery Actually Means.

For the longer clinical breakdown of the technique, the implant, and the recovery ladder, see his post on agulloplasticsurgery.com: What Preservation Breast Augmentation Looks Like on a Slim Athletic Body: A Motiva Preservé Case Study at 315cc.

See the case on social: originally posted by Dr. Agullo to Instagram and TikTok on @RealDrWorldWide.

Schedule a Motiva Preservé Consultation at Southwest Plastic Surgery

If you are weighing breast augmentation and want to understand whether Motiva Preservé is right for you, book a consultation. Dr. Agullo and the Southwest Plastic Surgery team will walk you through whether the technique fits your anatomy and your goals, whether the volume you have in mind makes sense for your frame, and where the MedSpa side of the practice can support your recovery on either side of surgery.

Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book a consultation online. Follow Dr. Agullo on social at @RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook. #StayBeautiful

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Southwest Plastic Surgery
1387 George Dieter
Dr. Bldg C301
El Paso, TX 79936
Tel: (915) 590 7900
Fax: (915) 590 7902
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The MedSpa Southwest Plastic Surgery West
5925 Silver Springs Dr.
Suite C
El Paso, TX 79912
Tel: (915)590-7907
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