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People are sometimes left with empty hanging folds
of skin after pregnancy, serious weight loss, or
sometimes just with aging. When this loose skin is
surgically removed from the belly, it is called
abdominoplasty or tummy tuck or body contouring.
When the skin is removed around the whole waist to
raise the buttock, lateral thighs and trim the
tummy, it is called body lifting. From the upper
arms, we call it brachioplasty. Thigh lifting is for
loose inner thigh skin or posterior thigh skin. This
surgery is designed to tighten loose and flabby
skin. Body contouring surgery changes the texture of
the skin by stretching it thereby making the
looseness and wrinkling less apparent. Body
contouring surgery may be combined with liposuction.
Liposuction is designed to improve fat bulges and
sometime also improve skin tightening and texture
when done in specific way.
As with liposuction, body contouring surgery is not
intended to correct obesity; patients should try to
have as normal or near-normal weight before surgery.
Although abdominoplasty is sometimes done under
local anesthesia, most other body contouring surgery
requires general anesthesia. Loose skin cannot be
removed without leaving scars, and body contouring
often means long incisions that result in long
scars. We will make every effort to give you the
beast scars possible, and to conceal them in the
least visible areas.
We will advise you during your consultation about
the type of scar you are likely to get. Although
scars will fade over time, you should know, that the
scars will be permanent and that their final width,
height and color are not entirely predictable.
The most common complications of body contouring
surgery are hematoma (an accumulation of blood under
the skin), seroma (fluid accumulation under then
skin) and numbness of the skin. Most of the feeling
usually comes back. Hematoma and seroma may require
intervention to drain the blood or serum that has
accumulated if it is a large amount. Problems with
healing after surgery are also possible, especially
if you are a smoker.
Normal activities can usually be resumed within a
couple of weeks and many people return to work the
third week after 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. |




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