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Dr. Susan E. Mackinnon, MD
3.5 ★★★★☆ 20 Google reviews · Tummy tuck surgeon in St. Louis, Missouri
Plan your consultation
- Board certification confirm this surgeon's certification directly with the American Board of Plastic Surgery. Check the ABPS registry →
- Today see hours ·
- Phone (314) 362-7388
- Website physicians.wustl.edu — book a consultation and see their before/after galleries
Hours
| Monday | 8 AM–4:30 PM |
| Tuesday | 8 AM–4:30 PM |
| Wednesday | 8 AM–4:30 PM |
| Thursday | 8 AM–4:30 PM |
| Friday | 8 AM–4:30 PM |
| Saturday | Closed |
| Sunday | Closed |
From the reviews
Looking up her Practice today because my son is having a similar issue that Dr Susan Mckinnion helped me with years ago and realized I need to write this review! Words due no justice to the amount of gratitude I have for her and her staff .
I live in the Kansas City area and out of the 12 surgeons who were recommended to me, after speaking to their nurses or PAs, none wanted to tackle my problem. The one orthopedic surgeon I did see started off our conversation with "you have a unique problem to which there is no good answer".
Dr. Mackinnon is the best. She performed carpal tunnel surgery on both hands and I have Nothing but praise for her. I was told by other surgeons I would never use my hands again nor would I be able to write. My 42 yr old EMG Said I had the hands of a 75-year-old. Within six months I was writing again.
I had an ulner nerve that was a mess. My left arm and hand couldn’t lift hardly anything or grip much. Dr McKinnon operated by relocating the nerve. This was 20+ years ago and I have had NO PROBLEMS since. In my mind she is a genius.
Researching a tummy tuck?
A tummy tuck (abdominoplasty) is major surgery with real risks and a recovery that usually runs several weeks — this page is a starting point for finding a surgeon, not medical advice. The most useful next step is a consultation, where a surgeon reviews your health history, examines you, talks through your options, and gives a personal quote. Bring questions and don't rush the decision.
Questions worth asking: Are you board-certified in plastic surgery (and can I verify it)? Where would you operate, and is the facility accredited? Can I see before-and-after photos of your own patients? What are the risks and the realistic recovery timeline for me? What's your revision policy if something needs adjusting? Whatever a listing says, always verify certification directly with the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) at abplasticsurgery.org, and discuss your candidacy, risks, and recovery with the surgeon.