Hematoma is a risk in nearly all surgeries. Treatment sometimes includes additional operations to drain the blood if the blood pool is large or growing rapidly. This may require another procedure in the operating room and, sometimes, additional anesthesia. As with any surgery, blood loss is expected.
However, uncontrolled blood loss can cause a drop in blood pressure with potentially fatal results. Blood loss can occur while on the operating table, but also internally, after surgery. Although post-operative care includes measures to reduce the risk of infection, it remains one of the most common complications of plastic surgery. For example, infections occur in 1.1 to 2.5 percent of people who undergo breast augmentation. Cellulitis, a skin infection, can occur after surgery.
In some cases, infections can be internal and serious and require intravenous (IV) antibiotics. The possibility of nerve damage is present in many different types of surgical procedures. Numbness and tingling are common after plastic surgery and may be signs of nerve damage. In most cases, nerve damage is temporary, but in some cases it can be permanent. Most women experience a change in sensation after breast augmentation surgery, and 15 percent experience permanent changes in nipple sensitivity.
Hypertrophic scarring, for example, is an abnormally red and thick bulging scar. Along with smooth and hard keloid scars, it occurs in 1.0 to 3.7 percent of tummy tucks. General anaesthesia can sometimes lead to complications. These include lung infections, strokes, heart attacks, and death.
Being aware of the anesthesia, or waking up in the middle of surgery, is very rare, but it's also possible. According to researchers, tummy tucks cause more serious complications than other types of cosmetic surgery. The most common complications were pain, surgical site infections, and wound healing problems. Others required extended wound care or repeated visits to treat infections or wound-related problems.
While liposuction is one of the most commonly considered plastic surgery procedures, it's not as simple or as little as people tend to consider it. People who undergo breast surgery may experience contouring problems or asymmetry, while those who undergo facial surgery may simply not like it the result. Plastic surgery has become increasingly popular and common in today's society, extending far beyond Hollywood. Sometimes people undergo plastic surgery for purely cosmetic reasons, but sometimes they do it to adjust certain body functions or, of course, to do both.
However, one of the most dangerous surgeries is orthognathic surgery, which involves remodeling and structuring the jaw. These complications are relatively rare and affect only 0.09 percent of all patients. patients undergoing plastic surgery. The trend in aesthetics is clearly towards minimally invasive surgeries and techniques, as can be seen in the statistics of the American Association of Plastic Surgeons.
Facial reconstructive surgeries usually treat several areas at the same time and, due to the area in which they are treated, they involve very complex and complicated techniques that require delicacy. Of course, there are different types of plastic surgery, and each type has some risks and potential complications that accompany the procedure.
The most common plastic surgery procedures were tummy tuck (tummy tuck)
and breast augmentation. However, there's another side to plastic surgery, and that's the dangerous side of plastic surgery, where risks can, and sometimes do, turn into complications.The researchers analyzed their department's experience treating patients with complications related to plastic surgery in a developing country. At the end of the day, remember that plastic surgery is still surgery and that there is always a risk. The authors point out some limitations of their relatively small study, conducted at a single center, including the fact that it only included patients who went to the doctor in the plastic surgery department. The risk was lower if the tummy tuck was performed in an office operating room rather than in a hospital or surgical center, according to the study, which appears in the November issue of the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.