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Can I swim after dermatochalasis surgery?

< 1 min read

Swimming after dermatochalasis surgery should be avoided for several weeks. Pools, hot tubs, and open water can expose healing eyelids to germs and chemicals.

Why swimming is unsafe early on

Incisions need time to seal securely. Soaking them too soon can soften tissues and increase infection risk.

  • Avoid all swimming and hot tubs until your surgeon gives explicit clearance.
  • Keep your face out of bath water during early recovery.
  • Do not open your eyes under water in any setting.
  • Use prescribed ointments and drops to protect healing skin.
  • Seek urgent care for redness, discharge, or wound breakdown.

Returning to water safely

Once your surgeon confirms it is safe, you can gradually reintroduce swimming. Protection and moderation support good long-term results.

  • Begin with short sessions in clean, well-maintained pools.
  • Wear snug goggles to shield eyelids from water and chemicals.
  • Avoid diving, underwater swimming, and vigorous strokes initially.
  • Pat the area dry gently afterwards and reapply ointment if advised.
  • Continue follow-up to ensure comfortable, stable lid position.