Common Risks Of Weight Loss Surgery

Tummy tuck weight loss operations carry a specific amount of risk when a person is attempting to flatten their stomach line down to a slimmer, less excess skin figure.  The tummy tuck operations themselves are a form of weight loss surgery, and as in any surgical operation there is a risk of severe injury anytime an invasive procedure is done if the body does not react well to being opened up on the operating table. 

While the risks during a liposuction surgery of potentially-severe injuries are low (due to the tummy tuck weight loss operations not dealing with any vital organ parts, instead only concerned with excess tissues around the abdomen) the period after the surgery can also prevent a few health risks.  It's important to follow the doctor's orders to the letter during recovery from weight loss operations, or the skin around the tummy tuck scars will face possible necrosis (dead skin).

While the weight loss operations themselves have a certain amount of risk attached to them (due to the nature of all surgeries placing patients under anesthesia, then opening them up under the knife to perform acts to the body that it considers as an 'invasive' act not built unto the normal response reactions) it is perhaps the weight loss surgical recovery itself that holds the most risk for patients.  After the plastic surgery operation is over, there is a long period of recovery where a person can end up causing severe damage to their skin if irresponsible behavior is committed during the tummy tuck recovery process. Smoking cigarettes, or being exposed to nicotine in any shape will cause the abdominoplasty surgery scars to begin a process called 'necrosis', in which the newly-cut skin cells begin to die off rapidly.  This will increase the unsightly scarring area, and require yet another surgical procedure to correct (which then lengthens the time of recovery as well as the restrictions required).

The least convenient part of a weight loss surgery is the leftover surgical scars that the patient will have to deal with for the rest of their life.  These weight loss surgery scars can only diminish over time, never fully go away, as they are basically the result of cutting away the excess skin around your surgical area, and have to be healed over naturally by the body-but the fact that skin is missing from your body will always leave a scarred mark where the skin used to reside.  In most cases, the weight loss surgery scars represent a small price to pay for the idea figure that it gives recipients, especially compared to flabby guts, excess skin after a dramatic weight gain, and an ever enlarged stomach that won't go down even after years of slimming exercises.  For those who only have a slightly larger gut, it's worth it to weight the options between simply slimming down without surgery, or living with a surgical scar for the rest of your life.