Recovery is a trend, not a deadline
There is no single day on which swelling, tightness or dimpling becomes “abnormal” for every thread and technique. Pay attention to direction. Symptoms that are mild, localized and improving are generally less concerning than symptoms that intensify, return after improving, spread, or appear with fever, discharge, an open wound or new weakness.
Follow the written instructions from the doctor who performed the procedure. If their advice conflicts with a generic online timeline, the treating doctor needs to explain why.
What may happen early
- Localized swelling, bruising and tenderness
- A feeling of tightness or pulling with facial movement
- Temporary surface irregularity or a small entry-point mark
- Mild asymmetry while swelling settles
These effects should not be dismissed as “normal no matter what.” Their severity and trajectory matter, and a complication can initially resemble ordinary recovery.
Lower-concern patterns vs symptoms needing review
| Symptom | Usually lower concern | Needs medical review |
|---|---|---|
| Swelling, bruising, soreness | Mild, localized and steadily improving | Increasing, returning after improvement, hot or accompanied by spreading redness or fever |
| Tightness or limited movement | Mild in early recovery and easing | Severe pain, worsening movement or increasing difficulty opening the mouth |
| Dimpling or rippling | May occur early in some cases, but should be monitored | Becoming more obvious, painful, persistent or distorting the face |
| Numbness or altered sensation | Mild, localized and clearly improving | New, spreading, increasing, persistent or accompanied by facial weakness |
| Entry point | Closed, dry and without discharge | Open, draining pus or fluid, or showing a thread end |
| Visible or palpable thread | Not something to label routine without assessment | Contact the treating doctor; do not push, pull or cut it |
Dimpling, asymmetry and visible threads
Dimpling can result from tissue being caught or tension being uneven. Some early irregularity may settle, while persistent or worsening dimpling can need clinician assessment. Asymmetry may come from swelling, thread placement, tension or a pre-existing difference that becomes more visible after treatment.
A thread that can be seen, clearly felt near the surface or protrudes through the skin is not something to reposition at home. Thread exposure increases contamination and infection risk and may require medical treatment or removal.
When to contact a doctor
Seek prompt, same-day assessment for increasing pain, swelling, redness or heat; fever, pus, an open wound or bad-smelling discharge; a protruding thread; increasing distortion; or new numbness or facial weakness.
Seek emergency care for breathing difficulty, rapidly expanding face or neck swelling, fainting, uncontrolled bleeding or a rapidly enlarging swelling or hematoma, or a new sudden neurological symptom. Do not wait for a routine follow-up slot.
What not to do yourself
- Do not massage, press, pull, cut or try to reposition a thread unless the treating doctor gives product- and case-specific instructions
- Do not puncture a wound or try to drain fluid or pus
- Do not self-start antibiotics, steroids or injections
- Do not apply heat or an energy device in an attempt to “melt” a thread
- Do not keep waiting when symptoms are clearly worsening
Limits of the evidence
Published studies combine PDO, PLLA, PCL and non-absorbable threads, different anchoring systems and very different techniques. Studies also define expected recovery and complications inconsistently. Meta-analyses show that swelling, dimpling, altered sensation, visible threads, infection and extrusion all occur, but pooled percentages should not be treated as a prediction for one patient or one product.
The bottom line
After a thread lift, watch the direction of recovery rather than relying on one fixed day count. Mild symptoms should trend better. Worsening pain, heat, redness, discharge, thread exposure, increasing asymmetry, numbness or weakness deserve medical review — and none should be “fixed” by pulling or massaging at home.