combining-cosmetic-surgery-procedures
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작성자 Patrice 작성일 26-07-01 12:29 조회 12 댓글 0본문
Combining Cosmetic Surgery Procedures
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Combining two or more cosmetic procedures in a single operation is appropriate in some circumstances and inadvisable in others. The deciding factors are anatomically driven (which procedures are being combined, total operating time, blood loss potential) and patient-driven (overall health, BMI, smoking status, to accept a more complex recovery). Done correctly on suitable patients, combination surgery produces excellent results with a single anaesthetic and a single recovery. Done incorrectly — too many procedures stacked, operating times beyond safe limits, patients pushed into combinations they cannot tolerate — it produces complications and worse outcomes than the same procedures staged separately.
This guide sets out the we apply when combined surgery, which combinations work well in practice, and when staging makes more sense.
The 6-hour rule and why it matters
The single most important constraint on is total operating time under general anaesthesia. Operations 6 hours produce elevated risks across several domains:
Our surgeons generally limit combined operating time to 6 hours and prefer to stay closer to 4-5 hours where possible. Combinations that would exceed this are staged across two or more separate operations spaced 3-6 months apart.
The advantages of combining (when appropriate)
For suitable combinations on suitable patients, the benefits are genuine:
The disadvantages and risks
The factors that argue against combining or for staging instead:
Combinations that work well
Several combinations are routine in well-organised cosmetic surgical practice because they address adjacent or related anatomical areas without requiring substantial repositioning:
The combination of with breast surgery (augmentation, lift, reduction, or implant exchange) is one of the most common combined cosmetic procedures we perform. See for the detailed protocol.
The works well because:
Eligibility: BMI under 30, stable weight, non-smoker (or stopped for 6+ weeks), good general health, completed family. Patients planning further pregnancies should defer.
Combining abdominoplasty with of the flanks, hips, and adjacent areas produces a more contouring result than either procedure alone. The technical approach is integrated — the liposuction is performed at the start, the abdominal flap is then elevated using the loosened tissues, and the closure is completed normally. Operating time is modestly longer than abdominoplasty alone but stays well within safe limits.
The face and neck age together, and addressing one without the other usually produces a partially-rejuvenated result that emphasises the untreated area. and are essentially always combined in our practice — the same incision approach gives access to both, and the operating time is only modestly increased over either alone.
Adding to a facelift is common and effective. The eyelid surgery addresses the upper face which the facelift does not reach; the combination produces an integrated facial rejuvenation. Operating time increases . The recovery is essentially the same as alone (the eyelid component is the shorter recovery of the two).
The relationship between brow position and upper eyelid skin redundancy means that sometimes makes blepharoplasty unnecessary (the brow elevation alone resolves the upper eyelid hooding), or means that less eyelid skin needs removing in cases. The two procedures are commonly combined or assessed together.
Facial proportions involve the nose and chin in a relationship — a prominent nose looks more prominent against a chin, and vice versa. with chin augmentation (using an implant or osseous genioplasty) addresses both elements and produces a better-balanced facial profile than either alone. Operating times are modest.
is when there is both volume deficit and ptosis (sagging) — common after pregnancy, breastfeeding, or significant weight loss. The combination is more complex than either alone and requires careful technique to avoid wound healing problems at the T-junction of the vertical and inframammary incisions. Operating time is longer than augmentation alone but stays within safe limits.
Adding to a facelift or neck lift addresses the localised submental fat pad that persists despite the lift. The combination is routine; operating time adds minutes.
Patients after major weight loss often have skin redundancy across multiple body areas. Combining procedures in staged operations is the standard approach — for example, with in one operation, then with in a separate operation 3-6 months later. See and .
Combinations that need careful consideration or staging
Some combinations are technically feasible but rarely appropriate:
The Brazilian butt lift question
Combining with abdominoplasty (sometimes marketed as "BBL tummy tuck") is requested frequently but is one of the most carefully combinations in modern practice. The concerns:
Where combination is undertaken, it requires careful patient selection and full understanding of the more complex recovery.
Patient suitability for combined procedures
Not every patient is a suitable candidate for combined surgery. The factors we assess at consultation:
Patients who do not meet these criteria are usually better served by staging the procedures across separate operations, or by addressing the underlying barrier first (weight optimisation, smoking cessation, medical stabilisation).
FAQs
How long do I need between staged procedures? Typically 3-6 months between operations, depending on the procedures involved. Allows full and recovery before the next surgical insult.
Does save money? Yes, on facility and anaesthetic fees. Surgeon fees still apply per procedure. Typical saving is 15-25% of the cost of doing them separately.
Is the recovery harder with ? More demanding in the first 2-3 weeks, but it is one block of rather than two. Most patients find the combined approach easier emotionally even though physically more taxing in the early phase.
Which procedures should not be combined? Operations that would exceed 6 hours combined, require patient repositioning multiple times, or stack high blood loss potential on one operative session.
Can I add procedures during my surgery? No — every planned procedure must be discussed, consented for, and pre-operatively assessed in advance. Surgical scope is not changed intraoperatively.
Booking a consultation
If you are considering multiple procedures and want to discuss whether combining is appropriate for your specific case, the consultation is where this gets worked out. Call or use the to arrange a consultation at our .
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering and cosmetic surgery GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and Lower Body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for is a CQC-regulated private on London’s iconic , offering plastic and surgery led by consultant surgeons.
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Saturday consultations available
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