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Permanently removes silicone or saline implants (with or without capsule tissue) when aesthetic preferences change or a complication arises.
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Incisions are usually placed over the original augmentation scar (i.e. inframammary fold or periareolar).
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Straightforward implant removals may require very little downtime.
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Some patients benefit from a combined or staged breast lift to address excess skin or nipple descent after implant removal.
Breast implants are not lifetime devices, and sometimes patients decide to have their implants removed without replacing them in a procedure called โexplantโ or breast implant removal.
Why Consider Explant Surgery?
Common motivations for removing breast implants include:
- Aesthetic changeโdesiring a smaller, natural breast size or preferring a more athletic appearance
- Device concernsโa rupture (saline implants deflate, while silicone ruptures are detected via MRI or ultrasound) or visible rippling
- Capsular contractureโabnormally tight scar tissue that forms around the implant, causing firmness or pain
- Systemic symptoms that a patient feels may be associated with breast implants, such as fatigue, joint pain, brain fog
- Recall of textured breast implants due to concerns about BIA-ALCL, a rare lymphoma linked to certain textured breast implants
See transformative results from our board-certified cosmetic surgeons.
Who Is a Candidate?
You are likely an explant candidate if you:
- Have breast implants you no longer desire, regardless of reason or implant age
- Experience implant-related pain, rupture, or capsular contracture
- Are medically fit for outpatient surgery: a non-smoker in generally good health, with any medical conditions well-controlled
- Understand that breast shape, skin quality, and nipple position may change after removal, sometimes necessitating a breast lift or fat transfer to achieve a natural, proportional post-op contour
Explant Techniques Explained
| Technique | What Is Removed? | Typical Uses | What to Expect |
| Simple explant | Implant only; capsule of scar tissue around the implant left in place | Intact implants without capsular contracture | Shortest surgery & recovery |
| Partial capsulectomy | Implant + select portions of scar capsule | Capsular contracture | Reduces surgery time, compared with total removal |
| Total capsulectomy | Implant + entire capsule, in pieces | Dense capsules, certain silicone implant ruptures | Adds 15-30 minutes of operative time |
| โEn blocโ capsulectomy | Implant & intact capsule removed together | Oncologic concerns | Requires larger incision and comes with more surgical risks; carries no proven advantage for BII symptom relief over partial removal; reserved primarily for rare BIA-ALCL cases |
While there is much discussion online about the pros and cons of certain techniques, we recommend speaking with a trusted, board-certified cosmetic surgeon in a consultation to decide on an approach based on the types of implants you have, any symptoms that have led you to seek breast implant removal, and your personal priorities.
Recovery & Expected Results
The first few days of recovery typically involve mild chest soreness. Sleeping elevated on your back and wearing a supportive bra 24/7 for the first month can help to minimize swelling. If you work at a desk, you will likely be cleared to resume work after 1 week. Patients are typically back to their full activity level after 4-6 weeks, and your new breast shape will become โfinalโ over the course of 3-6 months as the skin retracts.
Note that the technique used for your explant surgery may shorten or lengthen recovery times, and that every individual heals differently.
Explant and Breast Implant Illness (BII)
The FDA continues to study systemic symptoms reported by some breast-implant patients. While there is no formal diagnostic criteria for this, many patients and physicians use the terms breast implant illness (BII) or unexplained systemic symptoms.
Still, multiple studies looking at patients who attribute their systemic symptoms to breast implants show symptoms resolution after implant removal. This improvement was noted whether or not the entire capsule of scar tissue around the implant was removed, debunking the myth that an en bloc capsulectomy procedure is required for patients with BII-like symptoms.
Currently, experts agree on the follow protocol for patients with systemic symptoms:
- Physicians should conduct a thorough medical evaluation to rule out other causes of symptoms, such as autoimmune diseases.
- Patients considering explant surgery should talk with their surgeon to develop realistic expectations for their outcomes, and understand that complete symptom resolution is not guaranteed.
- When a patient desires breast implant removal, choose the least invasive surgical plan that accomplishes safe removal; intact โen blocโ excision is not often necessary.














