What this guide covers
Abdominoplasty—often called a tummy tuck—tightens abdominal skin, removes a controlled amount of lower abdominal tissue where appropriate, and may repair diastasis recti (separated abdominal muscles) when present. This article summarizes common candidacy themes, recovery expectations, and decision points for patients researching care in Boca Raton. It does not replace an in-person history and exam.
For the practice’s overview of the procedure itself, see the tummy tuck service page. For a deeper dive into candidacy and techniques, you may also find the abdominoplasty decision guide helpful. For medical vs cosmetic pathways in plain language, see the abdominoplasty medical vs cosmetic overview (2026).
Who may be a candidate (general themes)
Ideal plans are individualized. In general, surgeons evaluate:
- Skin and soft tissue: Significant laxity, stretch marks limited to the lower abdomen, or redundant skin after weight change or pregnancy.
- Muscle wall: Bulge related to diastasis that persists after core rehab (when appropriate).
- Medical readiness: Stable weight where practical, non-smoker status or cessation, and controlled chronic conditions.
- Timing after pregnancy: Many teams prefer waiting until after childbearing is complete and hormones have stabilized; specifics depend on your goals and anatomy.
- Expectations: Understanding scars (often low on the abdomen), the difference between visceral fat and what surgery can contour, and the limits of any single operation.
What a tummy tuck can and cannot do
May help with: smoother lower abdominal contour when excess skin is the main issue, tighter fascial support when diastasis is repaired, improved fit of clothing for some patients.
Does not replace: weight loss, treatment of intra-abdominal fat, or a substitute for nutrition and exercise. Cannot guarantee a specific aesthetic outcome; results depend on tissue quality, genetics, and healing.
Recovery: week-by-week outline (typical education only)
Every surgeon’s protocol differs. Below is a generic pattern patients often hear about in consultation—not instructions for your case.
| Phase | What many patients experience |
|---|---|
| First few days | Soreness, tightness, walking slightly bent; drains may or may not be used depending on technique. |
| End of week 1 | Gradual increase in light walking; focus on hydration, protein, and incision care as directed. |
| Weeks 2–4 | Swelling begins to plateau; office work may resume for some desk jobs; lifting limits remain. |
| Weeks 6–8 | Activity ramps according to clearance; core work only when explicitly released. |
| Months 3+ | Swelling continues to improve; scar maturation and fading continue for many months. |
Call your surgeon’s office for fever, shortness of breath, unilateral leg swelling, incision separation, or concerning pain—this list is not exhaustive.
Risks worth understanding before you book
All surgery carries risk. Topics commonly reviewed for abdominoplasty include bleeding, infection, fluid collections, delayed healing, venous thromboembolism mitigation, scarring, numbness or sensory changes, asymmetry, and the potential for revision. Your candidacy conversation should include how your personal history modifies those risks.
FAQ
How is this different from liposuction alone?
Liposuction reduces fat under the skin; it does not remove large amounts of loose skin or repair diastasis. Some patients benefit from combined approaches; others need one or the other.
What about after GLP-1 medications?
Rapid weight loss from semaglutide, tirzepatide, or related drugs adds timing and nutrition considerations. Read the GLP-1 body contouring overview and discuss medication timing with both your prescribing clinician and your surgeon.
Do I need to be at my “goal weight”?
Many surgeons prefer you near a stable weight you can maintain, but numeric ideals vary by body habitus. The priority is safety and durable results—not an arbitrary scale number alone.
Next steps
If you are ready for personalized advice, request a consultation and bring a list of medications, prior abdominal surgeries, and your priorities for scar placement and downtime. A candid, anatomy-based plan beats any trend you may have seen online.