The article would be incomplete without a clear contraindication list. Patients who fall into one of the categories below should not pursue abdominoplasty — in Turkey, in the UK private system, or anywhere else. Bringing this up here, before the enquiry form, is a deliberate choice: we lose the inappropriate cohort gracefully and build trust with the appropriate one. The contraindication list for abdominoplasty is more involved than for most cosmetic procedures because the surgical risk profile (VTE, wound healing, seroma, abdominal-wall integrity) is materially elevated by patient factors.
Abdominoplasty on high-BMI patients carries materially elevated VTE, wound-healing, seroma, and revision risk. Most reputable UK private plastic surgeons decline elective abdominoplasty above BMI 32 without prior weight optimisation. ATDERA Care Network applies the same threshold. Weight optimisation is the clinical first step, not a soft preference. Post-MWL candidates whose weight is stable below BMI 32 are in a different category — they are the post-bariatric cohort, not the high-BMI cohort.
Nicotine impairs wound healing and skin-flap viability — abdominoplasty creates a long horizontal incision with substantial flap elevation, and the flap viability is sensitive to perfusion compromise. Patients must stop smoking, including nicotine replacement and vaping, at least 6 weeks before and 6 weeks after surgery. This is a clinical scheduling requirement; the surgical risk is not negotiable.
Pregnancy disrupts the surgical result of abdominoplasty — the abdominal wall stretches dramatically during pregnancy, and a post-pregnancy abdomen looks materially different from a pre-pregnancy abdomen. Patients should complete their family before elective abdominoplasty where possible. Where an unplanned pregnancy occurs after abdominoplasty, the procedure does not preclude pregnancy, but the result will be disrupted.
Untreated hernia (without surgical plan), undiagnosed intra-abdominal mass, active inflammatory bowel disease, or unresolved abdominal pain require general-surgery clearance before any elective abdominoplasty. Where the patient has known hernia, the abdominoplasty pathway and hernia repair are coordinated as a single combined procedure where clinically appropriate.
Active skin infection — including unresolved intertrigo in post-MWL candidates — must be treated and resolved before elective abdominoplasty. Operating into an actively infected field raises post-operative complication risk dramatically.
Elective surgery during an active depressive episode or in the immediate aftermath of a major life event (post-divorce, post-bereavement, post-redundancy) is associated with poorer satisfaction outcomes regardless of the technical surgical result. NICE psychological-readiness analogues apply.
The abdominoplasty scar is permanent and substantial — hip-to-hip in standard cases, longer plus a vertical component in fleur-de-lis. Recovery is materially longer than other plastic surgery procedures (drains for 1 to 2 weeks, no upper-body lifting for 6 weeks, full recovery 3 months, scar maturation 12 to 18 months). Informed consent must include the scar trade-off and the recovery timeline; patients with expectations beyond what the technique can deliver should have the gap closed in consultation, not after the procedure.
Post-massive-weight-loss panniculectomy candidates who have unresolved eating-disorder behaviour, weight instability, or active bariatric-team concerns about psychological readiness require clearance from the bariatric / psychological team before any elective panniculectomy. The bariatric pathway clears the underlying psychology first, then revisits panniculectomy as a separate clinical decision.
Patients seeking abdominoplasty bundled with concurrent breast augmentation and liposuction as a single 'mommy makeover package' are asked to receive separate informed consent for each procedure. Multi-procedure stacking is sometimes clinically appropriate (additive theatre time, shared recovery) but the VTE, wound-healing, and theatre-time risk profile is additive. The ATDERA Care Network approaches multi-procedure cases per-procedure, with separate consent and timing review rather than as bundled marketing.