Whether you are having a breast reduction, an abdominoplasty, or a microsurgical reconstruction using tissue from the abdomen or thigh, being well-prepared for your admission makes the experience more comfortable and the recovery smoother. The basics are the same across procedures; the specifics vary. This guide covers both.

For All Operations: The Essentials

Clothing

The single most important principle for any breast or abdominal operation is that nothing should go over your head. You will have wounds, and in many cases drains, on your chest or abdomen. Lifting your arms is uncomfortable in the early days. Everything you bring to wear should fasten at the front — buttons, zips, or poppers.

TED stockings for DVT prevention will be provided by the hospital.

Before You Go to Theatre

Toiletries and Personal Care

You will not be showering immediately after surgery, and when you do it will be a careful affair with wounds to protect. Personal care needs adapting.

Entertainment and Staying Connected

Practical Items

The Journey Home

Bring a firm pillow and leave it in the car. For abdominal wounds and reconstruction donor sites, the seatbelt crosses directly over tender tissue. Holding a pillow between the belt and your body takes the pressure off and makes a journey of any length substantially more comfortable. The same pillow is useful at home for the first few weeks when coughing or laughing.

DIEP Flap

The DIEP flap uses tissue from the lower abdomen to reconstruct the breast. It is a long microsurgical operation — typically six to eight hours. You will be cared for on the ward throughout, with close nursing attention and regular flap checks overnight. The nursing team will monitor for haematoma and confirm the Doppler signal to ensure the blood supply to the flap remains intact. Most patients are ready to go home after one to two nights.

In addition to the general items above, bring:

TUG Flap

The TUG (transverse upper gracilis) flap uses tissue from the inner thigh to reconstruct the breast. Like the DIEP it is a microsurgical procedure with close ward monitoring overnight and a stay of one to two nights. The donor site is the inner thigh, and walking in the first day or two may feel slightly different as the gracilis muscle has been used — this settles quickly.

In addition to the general items above, bring:

LUG Flap

The LUG (lateral upper gluteal) flap uses tissue from the upper outer buttock to reconstruct the breast. It is a microsurgical procedure with the same pattern of close overnight ward monitoring. The donor site on the buttock or flank means that sitting directly on that side may be less comfortable in the first day or two.

In addition to the general items above, bring:

Abdominoplasty

Abdominoplasty is usually a one-night stay, sometimes a day case depending on the extent of the procedure. The abdominal wound runs hip to hip, and a Lipoelastic VH Comfort Girdle is worn from the outset. In the first few days, walking with a slight forward lean is normal as the abdominal skin has been tightened — you will gradually straighten up as swelling reduces and the tissues relax.

In addition to the general items above, bring:

Breast Reduction

Breast reduction is often a day case or a one-night stay. The wounds are on the breast, and a Lipoelastic P1 Elite or Super Bra is worn immediately after surgery. There are no abdominal or thigh wounds, which makes this a more straightforward admission from a packing perspective — but the front-opening principle still applies, and comfort matters.

In addition to the general items above, bring:

Preparing Your Home Before You Go In

A number of things are worth organising at home before your admission date, particularly for the first two weeks of recovery.

Sleeping position and wedge pillows

After DIEP flap, abdominoplasty, breast reduction, and breast augmentation, patients sleep on their backs until their first post-operative dressing clinic review, which is typically at ten to fourteen days. Sleeping flat can feel uncomfortable when the chest or abdomen is tender, and many patients find that a wedge pillow set makes a significant difference. A properly positioned wedge elevates the upper body at a gentle angle and supports the knees, taking tension off the abdominal wall and reducing the sense of pressure on the chest. Patients who try to manage with ordinary pillows often find them collapsing in the night; a dedicated wedge set stays in position.

Wedge pillow set for post-operative recovery
Wedge pillow set Widely available online. A back wedge combined with a knee support wedge is the most comfortable configuration for the first two weeks after abdominal or breast surgery.
Portable air conditioner — Which? Best Buy
Portable air conditioner Worth having in the bedroom for summer operations. The ProCooler unit shown was a Which? Best Buy (December 2025) and is a reasonable benchmark for what to look for.

Painkillers

Make sure you have simple over-the-counter painkillers at home before you are admitted. Paracetamol and ibuprofen (if you can tolerate it) are the mainstay of post-operative analgesia once you are home, and most patients use them regularly for the first week or two. You will be discharged with a supply of any stronger medication prescribed, but running out of paracetamol on day three and having to send someone to a pharmacy is easily avoided. Have plenty in before you go in.

Keeping cool in the summer

After surgery, patients wear compression garments continuously — Lipoelastic P1 bras, VH Comfort Girdles, and thigh garments depending on the procedure. These garments are warm by design, and in summer months sleeping in them through the night can become genuinely uncomfortable. A portable air conditioning unit in the bedroom is worth considering, particularly for operations planned between May and September. Patients who have one consistently report that it improves their quality of sleep and, with it, their recovery. It is one of those investments that seems unnecessary until you are lying in compression at two in the morning in a warm room.

A Word on Preparation Before the Day

Arriving for surgery in the best possible physical condition — well-nourished, well-rested, and non-smoking — makes a real difference to recovery. Patients who have done what prehabilitation they can tend to be more mobile sooner and more resilient through the early days. If you have not yet read about our approach to prehabilitation, it is worth doing so before your admission date.