Liposuction is normally safe, as long as patients are
carefully selected, the operating facility is properly equipped and the
physician is adequately trained.
As a minimum, your surgeon should have basic (core) accredited surgical
training with special training in body contouring. Also, even though many
body-contouring procedures are performed outside the hospital setting, be
certain that your surgeon has been granted privileges to perform
liposuction at an accredited hospital.
Your doctor must have advanced surgical skills to perform procedures
that involve the removal of a large amount of fat (more than 5 liters or
5,000 ccs); ask your doctor about his or her other patients who have had
similar procedures and what their results were. Also, more extensive
liposuction procedures require attentive after-care. Find out how your
surgeon plans to monitor your condition closely after the procedure.
However, it's important to keep in mind that even though a well-trained
surgeon and a state-of-the art facility can improve your chance of having
a good result, there are no guarantees. Though they are rare,
complications can and do occur. Risks increase if a greater number of
areas are treated at the same time, or if the operative sites are larger
in size. Removal of a large amount of fat and fluid may require longer
operating times than may be required for smaller operations.
The combination of these factors can create greater hazards for
infection; delays in healing; the formation of fat clots or blood clots,
which may migrate to the lungs and cause death; excessive fluid loss,
which can lead to shock or fluid accumulation that must be drained;
friction burns or other damage to the skin or nerves or perforation injury
to the vital organs; and unfavorable drug reactions.
There are also points to consider with the newer techniques. For
example, in UAL, the heat from the ultrasound device used to liquefy the
fat cells may cause injury to the skin or deeper tissues. Also, you should
be aware that even though UAL has been performed successfully on several
thousand people worldwide, the long-term effects of ultrasound energy on
the body are not yet known.
In the tumescent and super-wet techniques, the anesthetic fluid that is
injected may cause lidocaine toxicity (if the solution's lidocaine content
is too high), or the collection of fluid in the lungs (if too much fluid
is administered).
The scars from liposuction are small and strategically placed to be
hidden from view. However, imperfections in the final appearance are not
uncommon after lipoplasty. The skin surface may be irregular, asymmetric
or even "baggy," especially in the older patient. Numbness and
pigmentation changes may occur. Sometimes, additional surgery may be
recommended.