Liposuction Safety
This page is dedicated to providing our patients with information so that they can make a well-informed decision about having liposuction. Detailed information about specific liposuction complications is presented in the following:
- Excessive Liposuction
- Common & Minor Complications
- Rare & Severe Complications
- Drugs That Increase Bleeding
- Risks of Local Anesthesia
- Risks of General Anesthesia
- Risks of Ultrasonic Liposuction
- Safety is a Relative Term
- Preventing Complications
Excessive Liposuction
The greatest risks of liposuction are associated with the tendency of some surgeons to do too much surgery on the same day. The three types of excessive surgery include 1) removal of an excessive volume of fat by liposuction on a single day, 2) liposuction of an excessive number of body areas on the same day, 3) combinations of liposuction and other unrelated surgical procedures which involves excessive surgical trauma and prolonged exposure to general anesthesia.
Common & Minor Complications
Common & minor complications are conditions that do not threaten a patient's life, normal body functions or the ability to work. These include superficial irregularities of the skin, seromas, hematomas, focal skin necrosis, allergic reactions to drugs, visible or disfiguring scars, discoloration of the skin, fainting during or after surgery, temporary bruising, numbness or nerve injury, and temporary adverse drug reactions. Most of these complications can be considered minor, however some may become quite serious. Post-liposuction syncope (fainting) the next morning at home, especially after urinating is not rare. This can be serious if the patient falls and experiences a head or neck injury.
Rare & Severe Complications
Rare & severe complications associated with liposuction include problems with anesthesia, blood clots in the leg or lung, injury to the abdominal organs, excessive intravenous fluids, excessive blood loss, excessive loss of body heat (hypothermia), infections, allergic drug reactions, aspiration pneumonia (most likely under general anesthesia), cardiac arrest and potentially fatal cardiac arrhythmias, permanent nerve damage, brain damage due to lack of oxygen under general anesthesia, and seizures. See Rare & Severe Complications.




