Just had the op for liposuction three days ago, doctor hasnt really told me much and the nurses werent that great with specific info so was just wondering a few things :
Good patient education can make the difference in results. A well educated patient better understands limitations after surgery and can protect their healing tissues, result in much less bruising, swelling, and faster recovery. We take such education seriously in our office for our patients. Each doctor has his / her own routines to achieve their results.
1. Ive been told to keep the compression vest on for minimum 6 weeks but does this mean 24/7 day and night??
To understand this situation, you need to understand the function of
Compression Vests and Gynecomastia Surgery. For my patients, I vary the timing for both
First Stage Compression Vests and
Second Stage Vests. Not wearing a vest during a time it is needed can result in too much swelling, bruising, discomfort, and slow recovery. Not wearing a second stage vest removes the advantage of scar evolving under pressure. A scar that evolves under pressure does better than a scar without pressure.
2. Is it safe to shower, and replace plasters over stitches or is this not advisable and just have a scrub down wash avoiding the chest area??
Plasters or
Gynecomastia Surgery Dressings vary from surgeon to surgeon. Each has its own ability to withstand showering. With mine, most patients can take brief showers 24 hours after surgery.
3. Do you reckon I would be able to swim in 6 weeks time??
Kind Regards
James UK
Any activity after surgery has its own limitations. For swimming there is the water exposure, time of water exposure, increased blood pressure from activity, and moving arms up over the head. Like with the above questions, I prefer to individualize answers for each of my specific patients' problems and surgical solutions. In general, pushing healing tissues too soon too far can ruin results. Like with a muscle sprain, specific number of days for return to activity is totally artificial and has little bearing on reality. Comfort is nature's way of helping the body understand its limitations.
Check with your surgeon, he or she is most knowledgeable about your original problem, what was done, and should take the time to explain such issues and specific limitations to help with your recovery.
Hope this helps,
Michael Bermant, MD
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