Training built on repetition, not restriction.

A surgeon who chose to specialise, not diversify.

ABOUT

Dr Myny

Long before it became a specialty, facial anatomy was simply a subject Dr. Myny found difficult to stop studying. Training first in general and reconstructive plastic surgery, Dr. Myny spent two years on staff at Maastricht University Medical Centre (UMC Maastricht), working across a broad reconstructive caseload before narrowing focus deliberately — to the face, and in parallel to gender-affirming chest surgery, an area where precise anatomical judgement matters as much as it does in any rejuvenation procedure.

That narrowing was intentional. A surgeon who operates on the same structures often enough comes to know exactly how they age, how they scar, and how they heal across different skin types and body types. It is a discipline built on repetition, not restriction.

Today, Dr. Myny holds registration as a plastic surgeon in Belgium, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and France — a footprint shaped by training across borders, and by a patient base that has, increasingly, followed.

Three procedures, one philosophy

Top surgery covers three related procedures, each planned individually: FTM mastectomy for patients pursuing a masculinised chest, MTF breast augmentation for patients pursuing a feminised chest, and non-binary breast correction for patients seeking a result that doesn’t follow either standard template.

Approach and techniques (FTM mastectomy)

Technique selection depends primarily on breast size and skin elasticity, and is discussed individually rather than assumed from a photo. For larger breast volume or significant skin laxity, the nipple is fully detached and repositioned as a free graft through two incisions — a technique with very few complications, though the nipple loses sensitivity as a result. For patients with less volume or laxity, the nipple and areola can often remain attached, which carries a better chance of preserving sensitivity, though this cannot be guaranteed in advance. Both approaches leave permanent scarring, discussed in detail before any plan is finalised.

What to expect

Initial video or in-person consultation

Pre-operative planning & documentation (medical clearance, required letters)

Surgery day

Early recovery, typically supported locally before travel home

Remote follow-up and long-term aftercare coordination

For patients travelling from abroad

Travelling for your procedure?

Many patients travelling for top surgery combine the procedure with a short planned stay. See International Patients for details on consultation logistics, recovery-stay planning, and follow-up care once you’re home.

Photographs and results are shared only with explicit patient consent, and never used without it. Every surgical plan is built around the patient's own stated priorities — for scarring, for sensation, for outcome.

Ready to talk about your top surgery?

Every technique, timeline and scar pattern is discussed in detail before any plan is finalised.