
Liposuction / VASER-Liposuction in Istanbul
Overview & goals
Liposuction has been among the most common aesthetic procedures worldwide for years—yet it’s often misunderstood. It is not a weight-loss method but a body-shaping technique: localized fat pads are sculpted, transitions are smoothed, and proportions are harmonized. The number on the scale often changes less than expected; in the mirror, the waist, flanks, abdomen, or thighs look more defined. If you want to replace a diet, this is the wrong procedure; if you have stubborn zones despite stable weight, you can benefit greatly.
Candidacy, BMI, and expectation management
Best results occur with stable weight and good skin quality. A markedly elevated BMI increases risk and reduces predictability; if you plan to lose weight, do so before surgery. Large, diffuse areas aren’t suitable for “magic” results—contour, not kilograms is the guiding idea. After successful liposuction, weight gain can blur the new shape because remaining fat cells can enlarge. Durability comes from lifestyle, not liters removed.
Liposuction / Fat Removal SurgerySurgery Duration 1-4 hours Anesthesia General or local anesthesia Pain Mild-Moderate sensation of muscle pain Scars Very small puncture scars / almost invisible in the long term Socially Presentable After 1 week Durability Permanent, depending on weight change Hospital Stay Outpatient (local) or 1 overnight stay (under general anesthesia) Healing & Aftercare Corset 4-6 weeks, edema monitoring Fully Recovered After 1-2 weeks Visible Results 2-3 months Sports After 2-4 weeks Duration of Stay in Istanbul 1+4 days or 2+4 days
Classic liposuction vs. VASER—what’s the difference?
- Classic tumescent liposuction: tissue is infused with solution, then fat is gently loosened and aspirated with fine cannulas. Time-tested, versatile, and—used correctly—highly precise.
- VASER-assisted liposuction: ultrasound selectively emulsifies fat while relatively sparing connective tissue; fibrous deposits (flanks, back, male chest) can often be shaped more evenly, and transitions look smoother and more defined. It’s excellent for fine contour work (waist-hip line, lower-abdomen “V-line,” inner knee). Because energy delivery requires expertise, overheating, seromas, or lymph irritation are avoided by conservative, tissue-sparing settings. VASER is a tool—not a wholesale replacement for technique.
Very lean patients—why extra caution?
With thin fat layers and delicate skin, the risk of irregularities rises. Where there’s hardly any “padding,” millimeter differences can show. In such cases we often advise restraint, possibly combine with a tummy tuck (for lax skin/diastasis), or—if there’s no real indication—recommend against surgery. Benefits must clearly outweigh risks; “just a little slimmer” isn’t always a medically sensible indication.
Procedure, anesthesia, and common areas
Depending on extent: local anesthesia with sedation or general anesthesia. After standing markings, tumescent infiltration is performed; then classic or VASER-assisted sculpting is done along vectors that define the final silhouette. Common areas: abdomen, flanks, back rolls, hips, inner/outer thighs, knees, upper arms, chin/jawline. High-definition accents are possible, but only with suitable skin elasticity and very selective planning.
“Quality over liters”—why volume isn’t the metric
Impressive suction volumes are not a quality marker. What matters: symmetry, transitions, skin retraction, and safety. Very high volumes raise risks (fluid/electrolyte shifts, seromas, thrombosis, fat embolism) and—if ever done—belong in closely monitored inpatient settings. Our focus: precise contour, controlled volume, healthy patient.
Aftercare—how an even contour develops
A compression garment shapes the new silhouette and limits swelling: wear continuously for 2–3 weeks, then daytime for another 2–3 weeks. Intermittent cooling, early ambulation, and—from week two—manual lymphatic drainage support a smooth surface. Pause sport, heat, and sauna for several weeks; UV protection and nicotine abstinence aid scar maturation. A preview appears after a few weeks; the final result at 3–6 months once edema resolves and fascia adapts.
Risks, limits, and myths—plain talk
Possible complications: bruising, seromas, infection, irregularities, numbness, pigment changes, and—very rarely—serious events. VASER adds potential thermal risks if misused; experience and conservative energy settings are essential. Persistent myths like “the more liters, the better” or “fat never comes back” are false. The fundamentals of caloric balance, skin elasticity, and genetics still apply.






