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Cosmetic Plastic Surgery FAQS
This page offers a general overview of
cosmetic surgery procedures. For more in-depth information on these
procedures, please follow the links in the left column.
While this section explores cosmetic surgical offerings, many of these
procedures may also fulfill true medical needs. You should understand that
the circumstances and experience of every individual will be unique.
If you're considering cosmetic plastic surgery, please ask your plastic
surgeon for further information about the particular procedure and what you
expect.
In addition, please note that all surgery carries some uncertainty and risk,
including the possibility of infection, bleeding, blood clots, and adverse
reactions to the anesthesia. You can reduce your risks by choosing a
qualified plastic surgeon and closely following his or her advice, both
before and after surgery.
Tummy Tuck
(Abdominoplasty)
- Procedure: Flatten abdomen by
removing excess fat and skin and tightening muscles of abdominal wall.
- Length: 2 to 5 hours.
- Anesthesia: General, or local with
sedation.
- In/Outpatient: Either depending on
individual circumstances and extent of surgery.
- Side Effects: Temporary pain.
Swelling, soreness, numbness of abdominal skin, bruising, tiredness for
several weeks or months.
- Risks: Blood clots. Infection.
Bleeding under the skin flap. Poor healing resulting in conspicuous
scarring or skin loss. Need for a second operation.
- Recovery: Back to work - 2 to 4
weeks. More strenuous activity - 4 to 6 weeks or more. Fading and
flattening of scars - 3 months to 2 years.
Breast Augmentation
(Augmentation Mammaplasty)
- Procedure: Enhance the size of breasts using inflatable implants filled
with saline.
- Length: 1 to 2 hours.
- Anesthesia: Local with sedation, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary soreness, swelling, change in nipple sensation,
bruising. Breast sensitive to stimulation for a few weeks.
- Risks: Lack of implant permanence -- surgical removal or replacement of
the implants may be required to treat problems, including: deflation; the
formation of scar tissue around the implant (capsular contracture), which
may cause the breast to feel tight or hard; bleeding or infection. Increase
or decrease in sensitivity of nipples or breast skin, occasionally
permanent. Mammography requires a special technique. (Note: Some women have
reported symptoms similar to those of immune disorders. Ask your doctor
about these and other FDA concerns.)
- Recovery: Back to work: a few days. Physical contact with breasts: 3 to 4
weeks. Fading of scars: several months to a year or more.
- Duration of Results: Variable. Implants may require removal or
replacement.
Breast Lift
(Mastopexy)
- Procedure: Raise and reshape sagging breasts by removing excess skin and
repositioning remaining tissue and nipples.
- Length: 1 to 3 hours.
- Anesthesia: Local with sedation, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient. Sometimes inpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary bruising, swelling, discomfort, numbness, dry
breast skin. Permanent scars.
- Risks: Thick, wide scars; skin loss; infection. Unevenly positioned
nipples. Permanent loss of feeling in nipples or breast.
- Recovery: Back to work: 1 week or more. Strenuous activities: 1 month.
Fading of scars: several months to a year.
- Duration of Results: Variable; gravity, pregnancy, aging, and weight
changes may cause new sagging. Results may last longer or be enhanced when
breast implants are inserted as part of the procedure.
Dermabrasion
- Procedure: Mechanical scraping of the top layers of skin using a
high-speed rotary wheel. Softens sharp edges of surface irregularities,
including acne and other scars and fine wrinkles, especially around the
mouth.
- Length: A few minutes to 1 hour. May require more than 1 session.
- Anesthesia: Local, numbing spray, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary tingling, burning, itching, swelling, redness.
Lightening of treated skin. Acute sensitivity to sun; loss of ability to
make pigment (tan).
- Risks: Abnormal color changes (permanent). Tiny whiteheads (temporary);
infection; scarring; flare-up of skin allergies, fever blisters, cold sores.
- Recovery: Back to work: 2 weeks. More strenuous activities: 4 to 6 weeks.
Fading of redness: about 3 months. Return of pigmentation/sun exposure: 6 to
12 months.
- Duration of Results: Permanent, although new wrinkles may form as skin
ages.
Ear Surgery (Otoplasty)
- Procedure: Set prominent ears back closer to the head, or reduce the size
of large ears. Most often done on children between the ages of 4 and 14
years. (Occasionally covered by insurance.)
- Length: 2 to 3 hours.
- Anesthesia: Young children: usually general. Older children or adults:
general or local, with sedation.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary throbbing, aching, swelling, redness, numbness.
- Risks: Infection of cartilage. Excessive scarring. Blood clot that may
need to be drained. Mismatched or artificial- looking ears. Recurrence of
the protrusion, requiring repeat surgery.
- Recovery: Back to work or school: 5 to 7 days.
Strenuous activity, contact sports: 1 to 2 months.
- Duration of Results: Usually permanent.
Eyelid Surgery
(Blepharoplasty)
- Procedure: Correct drooping upper eyelids and puffy bags below the eyes by
removing excess fat, skin, and muscle. (Upper-eyelid surgery may be covered
by insurance if used to correct visual field defects)
- Length: 1 to 3 hours.
- Anesthesia: Usually locally with sedation or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary discomfort, tightness of lids, swelling, bruising.
Temporary dryness, burning, itching of eyes. Excessive tearing, sensitivity
to light for first few weeks.
- Risks: Temporary blurred or double vision. Infection, bleeding. Swelling
at the corners of the eyelids. Dry eyes. Formation of whiteheads. Slight
asymmetry in healing or scarring. Difficulty in closing eyes completely
(rarely permanent). Pulling down of the lower lids (may require further
surgery). Blindness (extremely rare).
- Recovery: Reading: 2 or 3 days. Back to work: 7 to 10 days. Contact
lenses: two weeks or more. Strenuous activities, alcohol: about 3 weeks.
Bruising and swelling gone: several weeks.
- Duration of Results: Several years. Sometimes permanent.
Facelift
(Rhytidectomy)
- Procedure: Improving sagging facial skin, jowls, and loose neck skin by
removing excess fat, tightening muscles, redraping skin. Most often done on
men and women over 40.
- Length: Several hours.
- Anesthesia: Local with sedation, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient. Some patients may require short
inpatient stay.
- Side Effects: Temporary bruising, swelling, numbness and tenderness of
skin; tight feeling, dry skin. For men, permanent need to shave behind ears,
where beard-growing skin is repositioned.
- Risks: Injury to the nerves that control facial muscles or feeling
(usually temporary but may be permanent). Infection, bleeding. Poor healing;
excessive scarring. Asymmetry or change in hairline.
- Recovery: Back to work: 10 to 14 days. More strenuous activity: 2 weeks or
more. Bruising: 2 to 3 weeks. Must limit exposure to sun for several months.
- Duration of Results: Usually 5 to 10 years.
Facial Implants
- Procedure: Change the basic shape and balance of the face using carefully
shaped implants to build up a receding chin, add prominence to cheekbones,
or reshape the jawline.
- Length: 30 minutes to 2 hours.
- Anesthesia: Local with sedation, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient. Occasionally overnight hospital stay.
- Side Effects: Temporary discomfort, swelling, bruising, numbness and/or
stiffness. In jaw surgery, inability to open mouth fully for several weeks.
- Risks: Shifting or imprecise positioning of implant, or infection around
it, requiring a second operation or removal. Excess tightening and hardening
of scar tissue around an artificial implant ("capsular contracture"),
causing unnatural shape.
- Recovery: Back to work: about 1 week. Normal appearance: 2 to 4 weeks.
Activity that could jar or bump face: 6 weeks or more.
- Duration of Results: Permanent.
Liposuction (Suction-Assisted Lipectomy)
- Procedure: Improve body shape by removing exercise-resistant fat deposits
with a tube and vacuum device. Can be performed using the tumescent
technique, in which targeted fat cells are infused with saline containing
solution with a local anesthetic before liposuction to reduce post-operative
bruising and swelling. Common locations for liposuction include chin,
cheeks, neck, upper arms, above breasts, abdomen, buttocks, hips, thighs,
knees, calves, ankles.
For larger volumes of fat or for fibrous body areas, ultrasound-assisted
lipoplasty (UAL) may be used. UAL is a new technique in which a ultrasound
probe is inserted beneath the skin to "liquify" the fat before it is
suctioned.
- Length: 1 to 2 hours or more. UAL: 20-40 percent longer than traditional
liposuction.
- Anesthesia: Local, epidural, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient. Extensive procedures may require short
inpatient stay.
- Side Effects: Temporary bruising, swelling, numbness, soreness, burning
sensation. Tumescent: Temporary fluid drainage from incision sites. UAL:
Larger incisions for cannula.
- Risks: Asymmetry. Rippling or bagginess of skin. Pigmentation changes.
Skin injury. Fluid retention. Excessive fluid loss leading to shock.
Infection. UAL: thermal burn injury caused by the heat from the ultrasound
device.
- Recovery: Back to work: 1 to 2 weeks. More strenuous activity: 2 to 4
weeks. Full recovery from swelling and bruising: 1 to 6 months or more. Use
of tumescent technique or UAL may decrease post-operative bruising and
swelling.
- Duration of Results: Permanent, with sensible diet and exercise.
Male Breast Reduction
(Gynecomastia)
- Procedure: Reduce enlarged, female-like breast in men using liposuction
and/or cutting out excess glandular tissue. (Sometimes covered by medical
insurance.)
- Length: 1 hour or more.
- Anesthesia: General or local.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary bruising, swelling, numbness, soreness, burning
sensation.
- Risks: Infection. Fluid accumulation. Injury to the skin. Rippling or
bagginess of skin. Asymmetry. Pigmentation changes (may become permanent if
exposed to sun). Excessive scarring if tissue was cut away. Need for second
procedure to remove additional tissue.
- Recovery: Back to work: 3 to 7 days. More strenuous activity: 2 to 3
weeks. Swelling and bruising: 3 to 6 months.
- Duration of Results: permanent
Nose Surgery
(Rhinoplasty)
- Procedure: Reshape nose by reducing or increasing size, removing hump,
changing shape of tip or bridge, narrowing span of nostrils, or changing
angle between nose and upper lip. May also relieve some breathing problems.
(May be covered by insurance.)
- Length: 1 to 2 hours or more.
- Anesthesia: Local with sedation, or general.
- In/Outpatient: Usually outpatient.
- Side Effects: Temporary swelling, bruising around eyes, nose and
headaches. Some bleeding and stiffness.
- Risks: Infection. Small burst blood vessels resulting in tiny, permanent
red spots. Incomplete improvement, requiring additional surgery.
- Recovery: Back to work: 1 to 2 weeks. More strenuous activities: 2 to 3
weeks. Avoid hitting nose or sunburn: 8 weeks. Final appearance: 1 year or
more.
- Duration of Results: Permanent.
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