DR. WORLDWIDE GETS SOCIAL
Frank Agullo, MD, FACS — known globally as Dr. WorldWide — is a double board-certified plastic surgeon in El Paso, Texas. He is a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and Affiliate Professor at the University of Texas at El Paso. Specializing in preservation-based aesthetic surgery and the Deep Plane Facelift, he has been named a Castle Connolly Top Doctor for thirteen consecutive years and has a global social following of over 3.5 million across Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat. He is the founder of Southwest Plastic Surgery and Plastic Surgery Studios.
Meet Dr.WWFrank Agullo, MD, FACS is the plastic surgeon the world watches. Known globally as Dr. WorldWide, he has built one of the largest followings of any surgeon on the planet (over 3.5 million on Instagram @RealDrWorldWide) by pulling back the curtain on plastic surgery and showing what extraordinary results actually look like. Celebrities, influencers, and patients from across the United States and around the world make the trip to El Paso, Texas, because when you have seen the work up close, there is nowhere else to go. More than 80% of his patients travel from outside El Paso. The practice handles every detail of their journey.
Dr. Agullo is double board-certified, Mayo Clinic fellowship-trained, and a Clinical Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. But credentials only tell part of the story. What sets him apart is a philosophy built on preservation: enhancing, restoring, and elevating what is already there rather than changing who you are. Not cookie cutter. Every plan is molded around the individual patient's desires, their anatomy, their life.
That philosophy drives every decision in the operating room. His Motiva Preserve breast augmentations deliver results that feel as natural as they look. His deep plane and endoscopic deep plane facelifts turn back time without announcing themselves. His Supercharged BBL has been refined, published, and presented on international stages. And his ability to combine face and body procedures in a single operative session is a capability few surgeons in the world can offer safely at his level.
The same philosophy applies outside the OR. Forget synthetic fillers. Dr. Agullo restores volume with regenerative grafts including Alloclae, Lipoderma, exosomes, and platelet-derived growth factors. Recovery is treated as part of the result: lymphatic massages, scar management, and Elixir MD LED light therapy ensure that what happens after surgery is as intentional as what happens during it.
Castle Connolly Top Doctor for eleven consecutive years. Texas Super Doctors Hall of Fame. Best Plastic Surgeon in El Paso for thirteen consecutive years. Aesthetic Everything Top Plastic Surgeon 2026. Founding Vice President and President of the World Association of Gluteal Surgeons, where he helped write the global safety standards for gluteal surgery.
The results are daily. The standard is uncompromising. The philosophy is simple: #MakeItHappen. #HappyIsBeautiful. #StayBeautiful.


GLAMOUR SHOTS
Plastic Surgery is a very personal choice and a unique experience for every individual who chooses to undergo a change, be it a discreet or major surgery. The one thing in common for my patients though is that they experience an inner transformation which ultimately shines through as confidence in themselves. Confident is Beautiful!
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A plastic surgeon’s honest read on breast implant illness, textured implants, and going smaller, with no sales pitch and no scare tactics.
Ten years ago, nearly everyone in my consultation chair wanted bigger. Now? Half of them want the reverse.
The pattern is consistent. A decade or more with the same implants. A late-night thread, a video, a friend who has felt off lately. And then the question, which I think deserves a real answer rather than a brochure. Should these come out?
Let me give you the version I give in the room, with nothing dressed up.
First thing I tell women. If you have carried your implants for years and felt fine the whole time, the odds are you will keep feeling fine. This is rare.
I have done thousands of augmentations. Out of all of them, maybe ten or twelve women have come back asking me to take the implants out because they felt the implants were the problem. When we removed them, most felt better.
I will not oversell that result, though. Plenty of the time, honestly, we cannot separate the implant from everything else going on. Aches. Fatigue. The fog that arrives in your forties no matter what is or is not sitting in your chest. When you have implants, they make a convenient suspect. The research is still catching up, so I am not going to hand you a certainty the science has not earned.
And I am not in the business of talking you out of removal either. My only job is making sure you decide with the whole picture, not the cropped one you found online at midnight.
This one I weigh differently. Textured implants, the kind with a rougher shell, have been associated in some patients with a specific type of lymphoma. Low risk, roughly one in a few thousand, and tied to that textured surface rather than to smooth implants.
So if you are carrying textured implants and feel perfectly fine, swapping them for smooth is still a reasonable move. My philosophy here is not complicated. When a problem can be sidestepped, I would rather sidestep it than wait around to find out. A breast augmentation revision is exactly the operation that does it.
Now the part nobody loves hearing. Pull out an implant of any real size and you will drop a cup size or more, and yes, things sag. That implant was propping up volume your skin stretched to hold over the years. Remove the prop and the skin does not spring back to where it started.
Which is why removal by itself is rarely the whole story. To look good afterward, most women need a breast lift in the same operation, raising and tightening everything into place.
Want a little fullness up top still? We have moves for that. I will not add fat to the breast during the removal itself, because the empty pocket needs to close off first. Come back a few months later feeling too flat, and fat grafting can put a little body back without committing you to another implant.
A lot of women land right here, and I love this option.
We take out the big old implant, perform a lift, and drop in a small one, sometimes just 150 or 200 cc, purely to hold a bit of cleavage and shape. A small implant behaves more predictably than fat. Reliable size. It does not shift every time the scale goes up or down on you.
| Path | What You Gain | What You Trade |
|---|---|---|
| Remove only | Implant gone, simplest plan | More sag, a cup size or more lost |
| Remove plus lift | Tighter, lifted shape | A lift scar, longer operation |
| Remove, lift, downsize | Lifted shape with a little fullness on top | A small implant stays in |
| Remove, lift, fat later | Soft, natural touch of volume | Staged over a few months |
The Motiva implants I place now run a rupture rate under half a percent and a capsular contracture rate also around half a percent. Set that beside the ten to fifteen percent we used to see with older devices and you understand why I stopped telling patients they have to swap every ten years.
These could go a very long time. I often add an internal bra, a mesh that holds everything in place so the result holds too. Patients here in El Paso and across the border read about the same options on our breast lift page.
Often, yes. A new firmness, a shooting or stabbing sensation, or just plain uncertainty about whether the implant is intact, any of those earns an ultrasound so we can look at the shell and rule out a rupture. If we need more detail, we step up to an MRI.
Sometimes that little stab is nothing more than the implant tickling a nerve. Harmless. I would still rather confirm it than guess at it.
I am double board-certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery and the American Board of Surgery, a Mayo Clinic plastic surgery fellowship alum, and a Castle Connolly Top Doctor thirteen years running. Removal and exchange asks more of a surgeon than a first-time augmentation does, because the tissue has been operated on once already. That is the whole reason I insist on examining you, reading your imaging, and being honest about how your shape will shift before either of us commits to anything.
If you are weighing whether to remove, exchange, or downsize, come let me take a look and we will build the plan around what you actually want.
For the patient-facing version of this conversation, see the companion post on agulloplasticsurgery.com. For the El Paso treatment menu, see the version on swplasticsurgery.com.
Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book online at agulloplasticsurgery.com. #StayBeautiful.
@RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook.

A surgeon’s read on why the earliest signs of postoperative infection are the boring ones, and why sepsis is a trend, not a number.
What are the earliest signs of infection after surgery? This question was posed to me for the Malpractice Monitor series at MDLinx. My response became the sentence that anchors their article. The boring, early warning signs, the ones easily rationalized and dismissed by medical providers, are the most critical ones to catch.
Here I expand slightly on that quote. The sentence is easily understood and difficult to practice, and its simplicity belies its gravity.
I do not know the facts of the malpractice case or the individuals involved. What I do know is a pattern, one that plays out in hospitals around the country, even at leading institutions.
Ask a room full of seasoned clinicians to name the recognizable signs of sepsis and the list is exhaustive. Low blood pressure. Narrowing pulse pressure. Cold, clammy skin. Elevated lactate. An abnormal white cell count. High creatinine.
These are all legitimate. They are also all indicative of a patient who is already ill.
By that point, the window for the easiest intervention has slammed shut. A simple recheck, a phone call, one perfectly timed consultation will not turn the clock back. You are playing catch-up against a destabilizing physiology that moves faster than a hurried clinician.
The early warning signs are subtler. A pulse that sat at 78 yesterday reads 96 in the morning and 108 by evening. A temperature that rises slightly above the patient’s average but is not officially a fever. Urine output that declines inexplicably. Breathing that picks up a little. A patient who is slightly disoriented, a little sluggish, just not himself. After abdominal surgery, pain that increases without resolving, plus new bloating, nausea, or no passage of gas.
Individually, none of these would raise much of an alarm. Taken together and moving consistently in the same direction, they are the whole warning.
That is what I gave MDLinx, and it is what I would emblazon on the ward board of every surgical unit in the country.
The most egregious failure is dismissing a vital sign as a single isolated value rather than reading it as one point on a moving line. Heart rate of 104? Just a number. Heart rate of 82 turning to 91, then 98, then 104 across four sets of vitals? That is a story, and it tells a clear direction.
Our focus narrows to the current number because the current number is the only thing the chart makes easy. The chart is great at providing a value and terrible at providing trajectory. The nurse sees the elevated heart rate. A resident looks. A covering physician looks. One at a time, each person reasonably concludes that 104 is acceptable.
Each of them, individually, is not technically wrong. All of them together are demonstrably wrong.
The problem is not intent or a lack of caring. It is a broken process.
Care is fragmented. At the next shift rotation, the nurse who saw the patient looking sickly at midnight is replaced by the nurse present for rounds at eight in the morning. The surgeon who operated is not always the one rounding afterward. The handoff, which is the critical moment to transfer a patient’s trajectory, often degenerates into a list of tasks.
Handoffs are where the trend dies. “Vitals stable overnight” can be factually accurate and clinically ruinous. Stable from what level? Stable compared with when?
There is no complicated or flashy fix for this. Call the direction out loud. Say instead: “Her heart rate has climbed thirty points since yesterday evening and her urine output is down.” That handoff communicates the trend. The extra five seconds are the price of knowing a patient instead of a chart.
I completed my general surgery residency at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and my plastic surgery fellowship at the Mayo Clinic, and I am board certified in both general surgery and plastic surgery. I trained and worked on wards where perforation, peritonitis, and postoperative sepsis are not abstractions.
The drama of sepsis arrives abruptly in some patients and subtly in others.
It is the subtle ones I still think about.
People assume aesthetic surgeons exist in a pleasant vacuum, far removed from all this. Not true. Infection after an elective operation is rare, and rarity, if anything, makes people less vigilant rather than more. When you expect a clean result every time, your mind subconsciously learns to rationalize the one odd finding. She is tachycardic because she is nervous. He feels warm because the room is too hot. Her pain is up because she missed a dose.
Each of those explanations is usually right. That is exactly what makes them dangerous.
I follow my patients closely and early, and I do not hand them to autopilot. A form gives me a value. A patient standing in front of me gives me a trajectory, and the trajectory is what I need.
My patients can call the office directly and they can text. Send me ten messages that turn out to be nothing so that I do not miss the one that was something. That is not customer service. It is clinical care. The patient is the only person present for every single data point, which makes their trend line the most complete one in the building.
So do not ask “is the pain bad.” Ask “is the pain worse than yesterday.” Do not ask “do you have a fever.” Ask “is your temperature climbing.” I care very little about the number on any given day. I care where it is going.
If someone you love is recovering from surgery, at home or in a hospital bed, be loud about these:
You are not trying to be right. Your burden is to be loud.
Use the word trend. Ask what the numbers were last night. Put the direction in front of the team, not just the value. A spouse who says “she has gotten worse every day for three days” has handed over the one piece of information nobody in the institution managed to preserve.
That is not impolite. In the right moment, it is the only actionable thing anyone says all day.
No one misses sepsis because nobody knows what sepsis looks like. It gets missed because each of the early signs looks uneventful on first pass, each one can be explained away, and the points land on the shoulders of four different people who will only ever know their own piece.
Read the curve. #StayBeautiful.
For the patient-facing version of this post, see the companion on agulloplasticsurgery.com. For the way we follow up with postoperative patients in the practice, see the version on swplasticsurgery.com.
Planning surgery and want the follow-up routine explained to you in detail? Ask. Any surgeon worth choosing will give you an exact answer.
Call (915) 590-7900, text 1-866-814-0038, or book online at agulloplasticsurgery.com.
@RealDrWorldWide on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, @Agullo on X, or @AgulloPlasticSurgery on Facebook.