
Mum, 40, spends £10,000 on 'mummy makeover' surgery after cruel trolls mocked her turkey neck and apron belly
Victoria Vigors, 40, from Kent, had lost all confidence in her appearance after a c-section left her with a noticeable scar that her growing stomach would 'fall over'.
'I was very self conscious about my FUPA, [fat upper pubic area],' she said.
'It was really obvious—I would wear tight fitting clothes and you could just see I had a really unnatural-looking belly. I hated it.'
After receiving numerous hate comments online, ridiculing her 'flabby belly', the content creator decided to start taking Mounjaro—the so-called king kong of weight loss jabs.
But, despite feeling the healthiest she had ever been, she was left with over 40lbs of excess skin on her stomach, face, neck and chest area.
She said: 'I'd been on Mounjaro for ages and eating really healthily, so I felt fantastic on the inside.
'But on the outside, my confidence was at an all time low.
'Where I had lost the weight on Mounjaro, the skin around my neck was like a turkey. It was all saggy and I hated my jowls.
'My side profile would show my sagging neck and people would point it out, saying I looked 50-years-old. Even my daughter would call me "jelly belly" and poke my stomach.'
After finding the Revitalize clinic online, Ms Vigors took the plunge and underwent 'mummy makeover' surgery in Turkey—which included a skin tucking procedure to tighten her stomach muscles.
She also underwent a breast lift with fat transfer to fix her 'misshapen' and uneven breasts as well as liposuction, detailing her journey on social media.
'Weirdly enough I didn't feel anxious about going in,' she recalled. 'I was already staying at the villa with loads of people who'd already had surgery and were recovering.
'They were all looking great already, so I wasn't nervous at all,' she added.
She told her 116,000 Instagram followers that she was 'obsessed' with the results of the procedure, after her dramatic weight loss left her with 'one boob much bigger than the other'.
After what would be her the first of many cosmetic tweaks, she took to Instagram with before-and-after videos flaunting her incredible transformation.
She said: 'I woke up feeling very groggy and I had drains [in my stomach] to collect any blood that was still coming out. The pain was unreal.
'Then they showed me a bit of my stomach that they cut away. It looked like a slab of fatty pork—I asked them to bin it,' she said.
'But once I could take the compression garments off, I was over the moon.
'My stomach had gone down and was so flat, and my boobs looked great. I thought "wow, this is my body now".
She added: 'There is a lot of pressure to be perfect. Of course, nobody can be, but this is my idea of perfect.'
Then just five days later she underwent a lower face and neck lift.
Despite having 'massive quilting stitches' all over her face that looked like 'tyre tracks', after the first 24 hours had passed she said the pain eased off.
Speaking to NeedToKnow, the mother-of-two added that she is overjoyed with her new look, which has given her the confidence to wear everything from cropped tops to cocktail dresses.
She added: 'My friends just can't believe how great I look. One of them walked straight passed me and didn't even realise it was me. Then she said: "Oh my god, look at you now—the glow-up is real".
She has since returned to the clinic for laser eye surgery and porcelain crowns fitted on her teeth—a procedure commonly known as Turkey teeth.
Ms Vigors now plans on returning again in September to have breast implants fitted and a labiaplasty, which is surgery to reduce the size of the labia minora.
'I'm super excited for my labiaplasty', she said. 'After having two children I want it to be more levelled out and neat.
'Now my face is done, my body looks great, it is just those final things.'
Figures suggest that around of patients who are left with excess skin folds develop infections or other serious skin conditions, such as ulcers, following dramatic weight loss.
Mounjaro, also known as tirzepatide, is a weekly jab that can help patients shed up to a fifth of their body weight in a year.
The revolutionary jab will reportedly be offered to around 220,000 people over the next three years under new NHS prescribing rules.
GPS can now prescribe the drug to patients with a BMI over 40—classed severely obese—and at least four obesity-related health conditions such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure or sleep apnoea.
More than a million people in the UK are already using the jab via private clinics, where it costs an eye-watering £250 a month. However, until now, only a limited number of patients could access it on the NHS via specialist weight-management services.
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