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What Is Recovery Like After Calf Implant Surgery?
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Recovery is one of the most important aspects of any surgical procedure to plan for carefully, and is no exception. The calves are weight-bearing structures that you use with every step, which means understanding what is expected of you during the healing period — and what to avoid — makes a meaningful difference to both your comfort and the quality of your long-term result.
At Centre for Surgery in London, we provide every calf augmentation patient with detailed post-operative guidance from the moment of discharge. This article covers the full recovery journey: what to expect in the hours and days immediately after surgery, a week-by-week breakdown of how healing progresses, the most important tips for a smooth recovery, and the answers to the questions patients most commonly ask us during the healing process.
What Happens on the Day of Surgery
at Centre for Surgery is performed as a day case under TIVA (Total Intravenous Anaesthesia) — a form of general anaesthetic delivered intravenously that produces a smooth, comfortable induction and a clear-headed recovery compared to traditional gas-based anaesthesia. The procedure itself typically takes between one and two hours, depending on whether one or both legs are being treated and the implant type being used.
Once the surgery is complete and you have been monitored in the recovery suite until you are medically fit for discharge, you will be able to go home the same day. You must be collected by a responsible adult who should stay with you for the first 24 hours. Driving yourself home is not permitted on the day of surgery, and you should arrange transport in advance. The legs will be bandaged, and you will be wearing compression garments, which are an important part of the early recovery process.
The Importance of Compression Garments
Compression bandages and are a cornerstone of recovery after calf implant surgery. They serve several important functions: reducing post-operative swelling by preventing excessive fluid accumulation in the tissue, supporting the healing structures around the implant, improving circulation in the lower legs, and reducing the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) during the period of reduced mobility.
Your surgical team will apply the initial compression bandaging in theatre before you wake from the anaesthetic. You will be advised on how long to continue wearing the garments and how to manage them at home. In most cases, compression bandaging is worn continuously for the first few days, transitioning to compression stockings for the subsequent weeks. Following this guidance carefully and consistently is one of the most important things you can do to minimise swelling and support an efficient recovery.
Calf Implant Recovery — Week by Week
The first week is characterised by significant swelling, tightness, and bruising in the lower legs. This is entirely normal and expected — your body is responding to the surgical trauma and beginning the healing process. The calves may feel very tight, and it can be difficult to walk more than a few steps without discomfort. Having assistance at home during this first week, particularly with stairs and activities that require prolonged standing, is strongly advisable.
Despite the discomfort, walking is actively encouraged from day one. Short, gentle walks around the home help maintain circulation, prevent blood from pooling in the legs, and reduce the risk of DVT. You should not remain completely sedentary. Equally, you should keep the legs elevated as much as possible when resting — propping them on pillows while lying down reduces the gravitational fluid accumulation that worsens swelling. Avoid sitting with the feet dependent (hanging down) for prolonged periods.
Prescribed pain relief should be taken as directed by your surgical team. Most patients find that the discomfort is well managed and describes the sensation more as tightness and pressure than sharp pain. You will need to keep the surgical site clean and dry, and follow any wound care instructions provided. Bathing should be avoided until the wounds are fully sealed — showers with the legs carefully protected may be permitted sooner, depending on your surgeon’s guidance.
At Centre for Surgery, a follow-up appointment is scheduled at around five to seven days to review the wounds and assess healing progress. The sutures used for calf implant surgery are dissolvable and do not require physical removal, but this appointment is an important opportunity to check that healing is progressing normally and to address any concerns you may have.
During week two, most patients find that swelling begins to reduce noticeably and that their ability to walk more comfortably improves. Pain and discomfort should be diminishing, and many patients are able to discontinue prescription pain relief during this week, managing any residual discomfort with over-the-counter options. Activity can be gradually increased to include slightly longer, brisker walks — though strenuous activities, prolonged standing, and any form of gym or sports activity remain off limits.
Some patients ask whether they can return to work during week two. This depends entirely on the nature of the work. Patients in office-based or desk roles who can keep their legs elevated and are not required to walk for prolonged periods can often return to work during this week. Patients in physically demanding roles — those requiring standing, walking, or lifting — will need to take longer off, typically three to four weeks as a minimum.
By the third and fourth weeks, the majority of significant swelling should have resolved, and the calves will be beginning to look and feel more like the expected final result. There may still be some residual firmness and minor swelling — particularly at the end of the day when the feet have been dependent for extended periods — but the improvement from week one should be marked.
Mobility is substantially better by this stage, and most patients can walk normally without discomfort. Light physiotherapy exercises may be introduced to help restore full range of motion and rebuild confidence in the legs. However, impact activities, running, cycling, swimming, and lower-leg weight training remain contraindicated until cleared by your surgeon. Returning to more demanding physical activity too soon during this phase is one of the most common reasons for complications such as implant displacement — patience is important.
From around week five or six, depending on individual healing progress, most patients receive clearance to return to their normal exercise routine. This includes cardiovascular exercise, lower-body resistance training, and sports. The implants are securely established within the pocket at this stage, and the fascia has healed sufficiently around them to provide firm structural support.
It is normal for the calves to continue to feel slightly different from pre-surgery for several more weeks — subtle swelling, minor variation in sensation, and a sense of awareness in the operated area are all normal at this stage and resolve progressively. The full aesthetic result — with all swelling resolved and the implants fully settled into their final position — typically becomes apparent at around three to six months post-surgery. Patients are often pleased to find that the result looks even better at six months than it did at six weeks, as the final settling produces a more natural and integrated appearance.
Top Tips to Speed Up Recovery After Calf Implants
Your surgical team’s instructions are specifically tailored to your procedure and anatomy. Following them precisely — including wound care, compression garment use, activity restrictions, and follow-up attendance — is the single most important thing you can do to ensure a smooth, complication-free recovery.
Elevating the legs above heart level whenever possible during the first two weeks significantly reduces swelling. Use pillows to prop the calves and feet up when lying down, and avoid sitting with the feet dependent for extended periods.
Short, regular walks from day one help maintain circulation and prevent DVT. Gradually increasing the duration and pace of walking as comfort allows supports recovery without placing excessive strain on the healing tissue.
Adequate hydration and a nutritious diet rich in protein, vitamins, and micronutrients supports efficient tissue healing. Avoid excessive salt, which promotes fluid retention and can worsen swelling. Alcohol should be avoided in the early recovery period as it dilates blood vessels and can increase swelling and bruising.
Smoking significantly impairs wound healing by reducing oxygen delivery to the healing tissues. Patients are advised to stop smoking for at least four weeks before surgery and to abstain throughout the recovery period. This applies equally to patients having , where smoking also reduces fat survival rates.
The temptation to remove compression garments prematurely — because they feel tight or uncomfortable — should be resisted. They are doing important work. Wearing them consistently for the recommended period significantly reduces swelling and supports the tissue in settling around the implants in the optimal position.
Returning to running, cycling, lower-leg weights, or other impact activities before receiving explicit clearance from your surgeon is one of the most common avoidable causes of complications including implant displacement. Even if you feel ready before your surgeon has given the green light, please wait.
Managing Common Post-Operative Symptoms
Swelling is normal and expected. It peaks in the first three to five days and then progressively resolves over the following weeks. Elevation, compression garments, and gentle walking all help. If swelling appears to be dramatically worsening after an initial period of improvement, or if it is associated with increasing pain or redness, contact your surgical team promptly.
Bruising around the calf and behind the knee is common in the first two weeks. It typically moves downwards with gravity before fading. If bruising is extensive or spreading rapidly in a way that concerns you, speak to your clinical team.
A feeling of tightness and stiffness in the calves — particularly on walking — is very common in the first weeks following surgery. This reflects the presence of the implant within the tissue and the associated inflammatory response. It improves progressively as healing advances and typically resolves fully by four to six weeks.
Some patients notice areas of altered sensation — numbness, heightened sensitivity, or a tingling feeling — around the operated area in the weeks following surgery. This is normal and reflects minor disturbance of small sensory nerve fibres during the surgical dissection. Sensation typically returns to normal as the nerve endings recover, usually within three to six months.
Is Calf Implant Recovery Different from Fat Transfer Recovery?
Recovery from is generally somewhat shorter and less intense than recovery from calf implant surgery, because no surgical pocket is created and there is no prosthetic device within which the tissue needs to settle. However, patients undergoing OnabotulinumtoxinAAbobotulinumtoxinAIncobotulinumtoxinAPrabotulinumtoxinALetibotulinumtoxinARimabotulinumtoxinBHyaluronic Acid FillersCalcium Hydroxylapatite FillersPoly-L-lactic Acid FillersPolymethylmethacrylate FillersAutologous Fat GraftingForehead Lines TreatmentGlabellar Frown Lines TreatmentCrow's Feet TreatmentBunny Lines TreatmentChemical Brow LiftLip FlipGummy Smile CorrectionMasseter ReductionJaw SlimmingDimpled Chin SmoothingCobblestone Chin SmoothingNefertiti Neck LiftMicro-BotoxMesotoxHyperhidrosis TreatmentChronic Migraine ReliefBruxism TreatmentTMJ TreatmentCervical Dystonia TreatmentNeck Spasm TreatmentBlepharospasm TreatmentLip AugmentationLip ContouringCheekbone EnhancementTear Trough FillersNasolabial Fold SofteningMarionette Line FillersLiquid RhinoplastyNon-Surgical Nose JobJawline ContouringJawline DefinitionChin AugmentationTemple VolumisingHand RejuvenationAcne Scar Subcision Filling transfer also have a donor-site recovery to manage in parallel — the area where fat was harvested by will also be swollen and sore for two to three weeks. The full comparison of both approaches — including candidacy, results, and longevity — is covered in our guide to .
What Results Can I Expect and When?
The final aesthetic result of becomes fully visible at around three to six months post-surgery, once all residual swelling has resolved and the implants have fully settled into their natural position within the pocket. Most patients are delighted to find that the calves look and feel increasingly natural and proportionate as this settling process completes.
The result is long-lasting — unless a specific clinical reason arises, and the vast majority of patients keep them indefinitely with continued satisfaction. Examples of what patients typically achieve can be seen in our .
Frequently Asked Questions
Most patients return to light work and daily activities within one to two weeks. Strenuous exercise is typically cleared at five to six weeks. The full aesthetic result — with all swelling resolved — becomes apparent at three to six months.
Yes. Gentle walking is encouraged from day one to maintain circulation. In the first days, walking will feel tight and uncomfortable, but this improves steadily throughout the first two weeks. Normal walking is usually comfortable from around week two to three.
Strenuous lower-leg exercise — including running, cycling, and resistance training — is not permitted for five to six weeks following surgery, or until your surgeon has explicitly cleared you to return at your post-operative review.
Most patients describe the post-operative experience as tight and uncomfortable rather than acutely painful. Prescribed pain relief manages any significant discomfort in the first few days, and over-the-counter options are typically sufficient from week two.
Returning to strenuous physical activity or impact exercise before the pocket has fully healed around the implant is the most common avoidable cause of implant displacement. Following your surgeon’s activity restriction guidance carefully is the most important step in protecting your result.
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Centre for Surgery is one of the UK’s leading specialist clinics for calf augmentation, operating from our purpose-built Baker Street facility in central London. Our surgeons are among the most experienced in the UK for this procedure, and our comprehensive aftercare programme ensures every patient is supported throughout every stage of their recovery. To book a consultation, contact us today at or email . Finance options including 0% APR through Chrysalis Finance are available — visit our for details.
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