Bottom Surgery risks & complications
An honest look at what can go wrong with bottom surgery, how often, and how to protect yourself.
Every procedure carries risk. Most complications from bottom surgery are uncommon, minor, and resolve with conservative management — but informed consent means understanding the full picture before you decide.
Common temporary effects
- Swelling and bruising
- Numbness or altered sensation
- Tightness, asymmetry during healing
Less common but documented complications
- Bleeding or hematoma
- Infection
- Wound healing issues
- Anesthesia reactions
- Asymmetry requiring revision
- Visible scarring
How to reduce your personal risk
- Choose a board-certified, fellowship-trained surgeon.
- Stop nicotine in any form for at least 4 weeks pre/post-op.
- Disclose every medication and supplement to your surgical team.
- Follow pre-op fasting and post-op activity restrictions exactly.
- Keep follow-up appointments — early detection means easy fixes.
This page is general education, not medical advice. Risk estimates vary by patient factors, surgeon experience, and technique — discuss your specifics with a qualified surgeon.