• Inquire
  • Pricing
  • Call Us
  • Visit
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Dr. Gerzenshtein

Jacob Gerzenshtein, MD, FACS,
A Board Certified Plastic Surgeon

  • RS
5/5

210 Google Reviews

Schedule Your Consultation

863.647.2200 Book Online
  • Dr. G
    • Medical Backgrounds
    • Associations
    • Interests
    • Philosophy
  • Services
    • Body
    • Breast
    • Face
    • Injectables
    • Non-Surgical
    • Male
    • BroadBand Light (BBL™)
  • Laser Services
    • HALO™ Laser Treatments
    • BroadBand Light (BBL™)
  • Before & After
  • Reviews
    • Realself Reviews
    • Google Reviews
    • Facebook Reviews
    • Yelp Reviews
    • Healthgrade Reviews
    • Rate MDs Reviews
    • Vitals.com Reviews
  • Patient Resources
    • Financing
    • Average Costs
    • Forms
    • Virtual Consultation
    • Gift Certificates

Is abscess formation common after revision breast augmentation surgery, what are the consequences, and what is the treatment?

Any surgery, in any discipline carries a risk of infection. The risk is calculated based on the degree of contamination for a particular operation. Breast augmentation is considered a “clean” surgery, and carries an overall infection rate of less than two percent. If infection should take place, it will most often affect one or more of three patterns, assuming there is no disseminated spread, and the infection remains localized. Infection can occur in the skin, in the soft tissue surrounding the implant, and in the form of a pus pocket. Skin infection will usually respond to oral antibiotics. Soft tissue infections surrounding the breast implant may respond to oral antibiotics, will sometimes require intravenous antibiotics, and in other cases need to be treated with implant removal. If the infection should progress to, or start out as an abscess (pus-pocket), the only treatment that will be effective in treating the infection and preventing more serious systemic complications is drainage of pus and breast implant removal. Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS) may result from the presence of a foreign body (breast implant in this case) in the setting of an infection, and is a truly life-threatening condition that needs to be addressed immediately. It is marked by high fever, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, light-headedness and possibly loss of consciousness, and a diffuse rash. The treatment is timely institution of IV antibiotics, and breast implant removal. If the breast implant is removed, the infection should be treated, the inflammation allowed to resolve, and a new implant placed weeks down the road.

Call us today at 863.647.2200 to schedule a consultation.

Refine. Transform. Restore.

FinerYou.com

Footer

Useful Links

  • About Dr. G
  • Services
  • Before & After Galleries
  • Average Costs
  • Financing
  • Forms

Our Location

  • 4429 Florida National Dr.
    Lakeland, FL 33813
  • 863.647.2200
  • jacob@fineryou.com
  • Mon-Fri - 8am-5pm

Newsletter Sign-Up

JACOB GERZENSHTEIN, MD FACS © 2023 Finer You PA