
A WOMAN has revealed that she jetted to Turkey for a BBL and loves her new figure – but not everyone is as keen.
The beauty fan explained that she had a Brazilian Butt Lift (BBL) and 360 liposuction in Turkey and has “never been so happy.”
Despite being dubbed the most dangerous plastic surgery in the world, the notorious BBL is still as popular as ever, and Danielle was one who looked past the dark statistics.
Posting on TikTok to show off her surgery results, Danielle (@xxxdjh69x) left many social media users open-mouthed at her new look.
In one clip, Danielle shared the before and after results of her Turkey BBL.
Wearing a crop top and a pair of gym leggings, Danielle turned from the back to the side, giving her followers a close-up look at her figure.


Seconds later, wearing a similar outfit but in green, Danielle did the same thing – as she turned around to show off the clear difference after going under the knife.
Her clip has clearly left many open-mouthed, as it has quickly amassed a whopping 297,000 views.
It has 9,525 likes, 128 comments and 215 shares.
But social media users were left divided at Danielle’s results.
While some were impressed with her new look and thought it looked incredibly “natural”, cruel trolls weren’t so keen.
One person said: “This is probably one of the best ones I’ve seen!”
Another added: “Don’t usually like BBLs but this looks amazing.”
A third commented: “I thought you were lying until I looked at your profile because it looks so amazing! Looks natural but such a difference.”
However, not everyone was as complimentary.
One troll claimed: “It’s sad to see people like this. You could just workout for 30 min a day and get the same results…” to which Danielle clapped back “False information.”
Someone else chimed in: “Or u could get of your lazy a** and get in the gym. Men don’t like fake girls, we want the real thing.”
Another agreed: “Or just do sports” to which Danielle responded “Or simply shut up.”
Whilst one user posted: “No one’s bum cheeks hang that low.”
When asked about the pain on a scale of one to ten, Danielle explained: “Honestly it’s been ups and downs but nothing higher than a seven for me.
“The most painful part is the lipo.”
Chatting to the Sun, Mr. Mo Akhavani, Consultant Plastic and Cosmetic Surgeon at The Plastic Surgery Group, explained the procedure can be seriously risky – and why people need to choose their surgeon wisely.
Mo said: “I’ve been to Canada, the States and Brazil and met with the guys who pioneered the procedure – and I’ve learnt all the pitfalls and the things that shouldn’t be done.
“When you compare it [BBL] to other standard procedures it does have a fairly high complication rate – serious complications, even death.
“That’s mainly because of people who don’t understand what they’re doing with the fat.
“You have to be careful with where you inject it and how you inject it.”
He added: “Fat is the safest thing to do – it’s yours, it’s not foreign material, it’s not likely to be rejected.
“Permanent fillers, like silicone, are a definite ‘no no’ – there are too many complications such as infection, horrible cysts and unsightly scarring.”
He went on: “If you don’t have enough fat to harvest then there’s no point really having the procedure.
“The second part is injecting the fat back in.
“You have to respect the anatomy of the buttock and how deep you go – if you end up injecting the fat into the muscle, because of its high blood supply, you can end up with serious problems and even cardiac arrest.
“This is avoidable if you [the surgeon] follow the safety procedures.
“If somebody injects fat into the wrong place and goes deep into the muscle, then the chances of the patient getting muscle necrosis – muscle death – and fat going into the vascular system (which you can die from) are increased.”
!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;
n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window,
document,’script’,’https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);
fbq(‘init’, ‘752905198150451’);
fbq(‘track’, “PageView”);