Can You Have Plastic Surgery With a Cold or Flu? Safety Guide for Patients
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Can You Have Plastic Surgery With a Cold? Our Safety Guide for Patients

As temperatures drop and gatherings move indoors, seasonal illnesses tend to rise. If you have a procedure booked, even a minor cold can raise questions. This guide outlines how illness can affect anesthesia and recovery, when to call your surgical team, and how to protect your health in the weeks before surgery.

Why Illness Matters Before Surgery

Your recovery depends heavily on your baseline health. Surgery is a controlled stressor for the body. Adding an active respiratory infection or significant inflammation can increase risks, complicate anesthesia, and slow healing. Proceeding when you are unwell may turn a routine recovery into a more difficult one.

“I usually power through a cold. Can I do the same for surgery?”

It depends on your symptoms and the type of anesthesia. Mild, improving symptoms may not require postponement, but airway irritation and congestion can be amplified by general anesthesia. Always update your coordinator if you become ill. Your surgeon and anesthesiologist will decide if it is safe to proceed.

Mild Symptoms That May Be Acceptable

If symptoms are truly minor, stable, and improving, surgery may still be possible. Examples include:

  • A light, occasional cough without chest involvement
  • Mild nasal congestion without fever
  • A scratchy throat that is improving
  • Negative testing for influenza and COVID-19 when appropriate

Important: even mild symptoms can worsen after anesthesia. Your team will weigh benefits and risks for your specific case.

Symptoms That Often Prompt Rescheduling

If any of the following are present, contact your coordinator promptly:

  • Moderate to severe cough, wheezing, chest tightness, or shortness of breath
  • Fever or chills within the last 24 hours
  • Swollen or significantly painful tonsils
  • Confirmed viral infection such as influenza or COVID-19
  • Bacterial infection such as strep throat or acute sinusitis
  • Symptoms that are worsening rather than improving

Rescheduling elective surgery is a safety decision. It protects your airway, reduces anesthesia risk, and supports a smoother recovery.

How To Protect Your Health in the Two Weeks Before Surgery

  • Limit exposure where you can. Reduce close contact in crowded indoor settings and practice hand hygiene.
  • Prioritize nutrition and hydration. Aim for balanced meals, adequate protein, and plenty of fluids.
  • Protect sleep quality. Consistent, sufficient sleep supports immune function and tissue healing.
  • Follow pre-op instructions. Take only medications and supplements approved by your surgical team.
  • Keep your team informed. Report any new or persistent symptoms as soon as they arise.

If You Need To Postpone

Postponement is common during respiratory illness season. Your surgeon and anesthesiologist will guide timing for rebooking once symptoms have resolved and you are back to baseline health. The goal is simple: proceed when conditions are optimal so you can recover predictably and safely.

Key Points to Remember

  • Your body needs to be in its best possible state before anesthesia and surgery.
  • Mild, improving symptoms may be acceptable, but moderate or worsening symptoms usually require a delay.
  • Communication keeps you safe. Tell your team about any illness, testing, or exposure.
  • Short-term postponement supports long-term outcomes.

If you are unsure whether your symptoms are significant, reach out. We are here to help you decide the safest path forward.

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