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작성자 Darin 작성일26-07-06 00:00 조회2회 댓글0건

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Benefits of Wearing a Compression Garment After Cosmetic Surgery


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Compression garments are one of the most consistently prescribed and most consistently under-used parts of cosmetic surgery recovery. The clinical evidence supports their use across a wide range of procedures — body contouring, breast surgery, facial surgery, liposuction — but garment compliance is often the weakest link in patient recovery. This guide explains what compression garments do, why they matter, how long to wear them by procedure, what to look for in a garment, and the practical realities of living in one for weeks.


What compression garments actually do


A well-fitted post-surgical compression applies graduated, even pressure across the surgical site. Several mechanisms the clinical benefit:


What compression garments do not do:


How long to wear them: typical protocols by procedure


Surgical teams give specific guidance for each procedure. Typical patterns:


(single area)


or larger-volume liposuction



Lipoabdominoplasty and




and



and


and



These are typical; your specific surgical team will give the protocol for your procedure.


Stage 1 versus Stage 2 garments


Most body contouring recovery uses two garment stages:


Stage 1 (immediate post-op). Worn from the operating theatre through the first 3-6 weeks. Features:


Stage 2 (intermediate post-op). Replaces the stage 1 garment from week 3-6 onward. Features:


Some add a stage 3 garment — a light compression shaper for use during ongoing healing through to 3-6 months — though this is optional rather than standard.


Choosing the right garment


What to look for:


Your surgical team will usually have garment recommendations and may supply or sell suitable garments. Branded medical manufacturers (Marena, Macom, Design Veronique, Lipoelastic) produce reliable products. Cheaper alternatives sold online are often inadequate for serious post-surgical use.


Living in a compression garment: practical realities


Continuous compression for weeks at a time is challenging. Practical points:


Toileting. Garments with toilet openings or zippered access make this much easier. these features, fully removing the garment for every bathroom visit becomes exhausting.


Showering. Garments come off for showering. Plan accordingly — a non-slip stool in the shower, easy-removal garment, somewhere to put the wet garment if you sweat through it.


Sleeping. Stage 1 garments in particular are uncomfortable to sleep in. A loose nightshirt over the garment friction. Pillows for positioning reduce pressure points.


Skin care underneath. the skin daily for redness, marks, or developing skin reactions. Apply small amounts of unscented moisturiser to dry areas (away from incisions). Watch for fungal infection in skin folds.


Working in a garment. Stage 1 garments are not designed for office or social wear; most are off work during this phase. Stage 2 garments fit reasonably under loose clothing — A-line dresses, loose trousers, longer tops.


Exercise in a garment. Light walking is encouraged with the garment on. More vigorous exercise is restricted by both the surgical team and the practical limitations of the garment.


. Common in the first weeks as the body heals. Moisture-wicking garments help. Have a spare garment to switch to if the current one becomes soaked.


Washing the garment. Cool wash with mild detergent, air-dry. Avoid tumble drying — heat damages the elastic fibres and reduces compression effectiveness. A garment that has lost its compression is functionally useless.


Don’t size down "to compress more". A garment does not provide better compression — it produces uneven pressure, skin damage, and healing.


Common problems and how to handle them


Skin irritation under the garment. Common in the first weeks. A thin cotton vest underneath can reduce friction. Watch for developing rash, redness, or itching that does not resolvepossible contact dermatitis to fabric or detergent.


Pinching or rolling at the edges. Garment may be the wrong size or the wrong cut for your body shape. Try a different fit.


in the hands or feet. Garment too tight at the limb opening, circulation. Loosen, re-size, or seek advice.


Increased rather than decreased swelling. Garment may be too tight, creating a tourniquet effect. Loosen or get re-fitted.


Wet patches at incisions. May indicate seroma formation or wound discharge — assess and contact the clinic if persistent.


Fungal infection in skin folds. Itchy red rash in skin folds under the garment. Treat with antifungal cream and improve garment .


Garment loses compression after a few weeks. Either incorrect washing (heat damage to elastic) or the garment was Lower Body quality than expected. .


Cannot tolerate the garment at all. Raise with the surgical team. Sometimes a different brand or design works much better. Complete non-compliance is worse than partial use.


What happens if you don’t wear the garment


has measurable consequences:


Patients sometimes ask whether the is genuinely necessary or just a precaution. The honest answer is that it is genuinely necessary for most major body contouring procedures. The clinical benefit is well-documented.


Compression and lymphatic drainage massage


Compression garments and work as a complementary pair, not as alternatives. MLD accelerate fluid clearance acutely; the garment the gains between sessions. Patients who combine consistent garment with a course of MLD typically have the smoothest swelling resolution and the best final contour.


FAQs


Can I sleep without my compression garment? Not in the first 3-4 weeks for most procedures. After that, depends on the and stage.


Will compression my skin permanently? No. It supports healing but does not produce lasting skin tightening.


Can I exercise in a compression garment? Light walking, yes. Vigorous exercise is restricted by your surgical recovery plan, not just the garment.


What if my garment gets too loose? Either you have lost swelling (good) or the has lost its elasticity (replace it). If genuinely too loose, a smaller stage 2 garment is appropriate.


Can I wear a different garment for going out? Stage 2 garments can be worn under regular clothing. Stage 1 garments are not really designed for this and are typically worn during home recovery.


Are there alternatives if I cannot tolerate the prescribed garment? Different brands and designs vary substantially in fit and comfort. Try alternatives before giving up on compression altogether.


How do I know if it’s the right size? Should be snug but not painful, no skin discolouration, no numbness or tingling beyond the garment edges, no at openings.


Can I shower with it on? No — remove for showering. lose effectiveness when waterlogged and takes hours.


Booking a consultation


If you are planning cosmetic surgery and want to understand the recovery requirements including compression garment use, this is covered at consultation and in pre-operative briefing. 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 plastic and cosmetic through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.




Marylebone

London

W1U 6RN




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Saturday consultations available


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