How to Massage Yourself After Cosmetic Surgery

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Self-massage during recovery is one of the most useful interventions a patient can carry out at home. The right technique at the right time accelerates swelling resolution, softens scar tissue, reduces after liposuction, and supports the final aesthetic outcome. The wrong technique, started too early or applied with the wrong pressure, can disrupt healing and worsen results. This guide covers the practical self-massage techniques used after the most common procedures, when to start, and what to avoid.

Self-massage works alongside — not instead of — professional sessions, compression garment use, and clinical follow-up.

General principles of self-massage during recovery

A few principles apply across all procedures:

Sun protection of scars

Before discussing massage technique, the most important intervention for scar quality is sun protection. UV exposure on developing scars produces permanent hyperpigmentation that cannot be reversed. Practical rules:

Scar massage

The most universally applicable self-massage technique. Scar massage:

When to start: typically 4-6 weeks post-op once the wound is fully closed and the surgical team has cleared scar massage. Earlier scar manipulation can disrupt healing.

Technique:

Pressure: firm enough to blanch the surrounding skin briefly but not so firm that it causes sharp pain or skin damage.

Duration of programme: typically 3-6 months. Scars continue to mature for months but the most active intervention period is the first 6 months.

Combine with silicone gel sheets where prescribed — see . The combination of silicone gel plus scar produces better outcomes than either alone.

Breast implant displacement exercises after augmentation

After , displacement exercises (sometimes called “implant massage”) help the implants settle into the surgical pocket and contribute to the natural drop-and-fluff process. The protocol has been refined in recent years — earlier recommendations involving very frequent intense massage have been replaced by gentler, less frequent protocols.

When to start: typically 2 weeks post-op, on surgeon clearance. Specific varies — some surgeons do not recommend displacement exercises at all About Laser Hair Removal for Women certain implant types (textured implants, dual-plane placements), so follow your specific surgical team’s protocol.

Technique:

What to avoid: aggressive or pressure that causes significant pain. The point is to encourage natural settling, not to force the implants into a . Surface scar is separate and starts later (4-6 weeks).

See for what to expect as implants settle.

Self-massage after abdominoplasty

Abdominoplasty produces extensive swelling that resolves gradually over 3-6 months. Self-massage in combination with compression garment use and professional MLD speeds the resolution.

When to start: typically 2-3 weeks post-op for gentle self-massage of the abdomen (not the incision itself). Direct scar massage starts later, at 4-6 weeks once the incision is fully closed.

Technique for swelling reduction (weeks 2-8):

Technique for scar massage (from week 4-6):

What to expect: the abdomen will feel firm and swollen for weeks. Lumps and bumps under the scar are common in the early weeks and usually soften with continued massage. Persistent hard areas at 12+ weeks warrant clinical assessment.

Self-massage after liposuction

produces extensive subcutaneous swelling and small amounts of fibrosis that respond well to combined professional MLD and self-massage. The aim is to keep tissue mobile and prevent the development of hard, lumpy areas that can persist.

When to start: typically 5-10 days post-op for gentle self-massage, on surgeon clearance.

Technique:

Combine with professional MLD — the two are complementary rather than alternative. See .

Procedure variations: tends to produce more uniform contour with less fibrosis. requires self-massage across the whole circumference.

Self-massage after BBL

involves two distinct self-massage considerations:

Gentle lymphatic-style strokes around the periphery of the buttocks (not over the augmented area) can help without disrupting fat survival. After 6-8 weeks the buttocks can be treated more like other areas. See .

Self-massage after facelift and neck lift

Facial post-op massage requires particularly gentle technique. Heavy pressure on healing facial tissues can disrupt underlying SMAS work, displace small sutures, or produce hematomas.

When to start: typically 1-2 weeks post-op for very gentle facial self-massage; more substantial technique from 3-4 weeks.

Technique:

Special considerations: areas of numbness behind the ears and in the lower face are normal post-facelift and resolve over months. Massaging numb areas is safe but feels strange. Areas of unusual or tenderness should be raised at follow-up rather than aggressively massaged.

Self-massage after rhinoplasty

Most rhinoplasty post-op care is hands-off — the nose is splinted for the first week and significant external manipulation can disrupt the technical work. Some surgeons recommend gentle massage of specific areas in the later recovery phase:

Do not initiate rhinoplasty self-massage without explicit direction from your surgical team. The standard advice is hands-off for the first 6-12 weeks.

Self-massage after labiaplasty

recovery is largely hands-off. Some considerations:

Self-massage after blepharoplasty

The eyelid area is delicate and most self-massage is best avoided. What helps:

Self-massage after gynaecomastia surgery

recovery benefits from chest self-massage similar to abdominoplasty:

What not to do

When to stop and call the clinic

Stop massage and contact the clinic if you notice:

FAQs

How long do I need to massage? Procedure-dependent. Scar massage typically 3-6 months. Abdominal and liposuction self-massage 6-8 weeks. Breast implant displacement 4-6 weeks. Your surgical team will give specific guidance.

What do I use for self-massage? Plain unscented moisturiser (Aveeno, E45, CeraVe), vitamin E oil, arnica gel, or silicone gel for scars. Avoid heavily perfumed products and active ingredients (retinoids, acids) directly on healing wounds.

How firm should I press? Firm enough to feel meaningful pressure but not so firm that it produces sharp pain. Mild discomfort is acceptable; significant pain is not.

Can I overdo it? Yes — excessive pressure or duration can disrupt healing. The above are typical; more is not better.

Is self-massage as good as professional MLD? No, they are complementary. Professional MLD has specific techniques and reaches areas self-massage cannot. Self-massage between professional sessions extends the .

What if I have areas of numbness? Common after most cosmetic procedures and resolves over months to a year. Massaging numb areas is safe but feels strange — apply pressure based on visual feedback rather than feel.

Booking a consultation

If you are planning cosmetic surgery and want to understand what recovery looks like — including self-massage protocols — this is at consultation. 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 surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our spans facial including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient 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 , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.

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