From folliculitis to necrosis — what can go wrong after a hair transplant, how likely each complication is, and when to escalate to your clinic or seek emergency care.
Content is educational and planning-oriented. It does not replace diagnosis, treatment, or personalized medical advice from a licensed healthcare professional. Outcomes vary by individual case.
Minor complications occur in roughly 0.10% of hair transplant cases; life-threatening complications are extremely rare.
Most post-op discomfort resolves within 1–2 days, with tenderness lasting up to 7–10 days.
Spreading redness with fever, worsening pain after day 3, and heavy bleeding are reasons to call your clinic within hours.
Dark or blackened tissue (necrosis signs) and symptoms of anaphylaxis require immediate emergency care — not clinic contact first.
Your clinic should provide 24/7 post-procedure contact numbers, written aftercare instructions, and a clear escalation protocol before you travel home.
Educational information only
This content is general education and does not replace evaluation by a licensed clinician. If you have symptoms, complications, or urgent concerns, seek in-person medical care.
What Complication Risks Exist With Hair Transplants?
Hair transplants are commonly performed procedures, but they carry potential risks that can vary depending on the surgical technique, individual patient factors, and the standards of the facility. Understanding what can go wrong — and how to recognize it — is a core part of making a confident, informed decision.
Complications broadly fall into three categories: surgical, aesthetic, and systemic.
Surgical Complications
These affect the operative site during or shortly after the procedure:
Facial swelling and edema: Fluid buildup around the forehead and eyes may occur after the procedure and typically resolves within days as the body heals.
Bleeding at donor or recipient sites: Minor bleeding is normal during the early recovery period; persistent or heavy bleeding beyond the first 24 hours may indicate a vascular issue and warrants clinic contact.
Post-operative pain: Discomfort is typically manageable and peaks in the first 24–48 hours after the procedure.
Vasovagal shock, hiccups, and hypertensive crisis: These are documented but rare responses — a retrospective study of 2,896 patients recorded 7 cases of vasovagal shock and 6 cases of hiccups (Garg & Garg 2021, PubMed).
Aesthetic Complications
These affect the cosmetic outcome of the procedure:
Shock loss: Temporary shedding of existing or transplanted hair in the recipient or donor area. This is a documented phenomenon that varies among patients and does not always indicate permanent loss.
Poor or failed graft growth: Grafts may not survive in all cases; this risk exists even with experienced surgeons (Kerure & Patwardhan 2018, PubMed).
Visible scarring: More relevant to the FUT (strip) method, which involves a linear incision; scarring patterns vary by technique and individual healing response.
Cobblestoning or unnatural hairline: Irregular texture or poor design planning can affect cosmetic results.
Both FUT and FUE carry unique risk profiles. FUE may present lower long-term scarring risk, while FUT may carry a higher risk of linear scar complications. However, surgeon skill and facility standards often matter more than technique choice alone when it comes to complication rates.
How Common Are Complications?
What Large-Scale Data Shows
A retrospective study of 2,896 hair transplant patients (Garg & Garg 2021, PubMed) found a minor complication rate of approximately 0.10% — with zero life-threatening complications recorded across the study period (June 2009–November 2020). Sterile folliculitis was the most common minor complication, affecting roughly 7% of patients in that cohort.
Complication rates can differ between FUT and FUE techniques. FUE-specific risks include donor depletion, pinpoint scarring, overharvesting, and buried grafts. FUT-specific risks include wound dehiscence, linear scarring, and neuralgias (Kerure & Patwardhan 2018, PubMed).
How Patient Risk Factors Affect Complication Likelihood
Individual health factors can amplify certain risks. The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS, Risk Factors) lists the following as factors that may increase postoperative infection, bleeding, or delayed healing:
Tobacco use
Alcohol abuse
Obesity
Malnutrition
Immunosuppressive drugs
Diabetes
Chronic diseases
Medications affecting clotting
If any of these apply to you, discuss them openly with your surgeon during the candidacy evaluation phase. For a broader look at candidacy criteria, see our Hair Transplant Candidacy: Foundation 101.
What Symptoms Are Normal During Recovery?
Understanding the normal recovery timeline helps you distinguish expected healing from symptoms that may require professional attention.
Pain and Discomfort Timeline
According to the ISHRS aftercare guidance (After Hair Restoration Surgery), post-operative pain typically resolves within 1–2 days after the procedure. Residual tenderness at the donor and recipient sites may persist for 7–10 days. Most patients report no more than mild discomfort when appropriate pain management is used.
Expected Physical Findings
The following are generally considered normal parts of the healing process:
Facial edema (swelling): May peak in the first 48–72 hours and typically resolves within days.
Crusting and itching: As grafts settle and healing progresses, mild crusting and itching around the recipient area is common and generally subsides within the first two weeks.
Shock loss: Temporary shedding of hair in or around the grafted area can occur weeks to months post-procedure. This does not always mean graft failure and is considered a variable response that differs among patients.
Keep a symptom diary
Write down when symptoms appear and how they change day by day. This record can help your clinic distinguish normal healing from complications during follow-up appointments or virtual consultations.
Which Symptoms Should You Escalate?
Recognizing when something requires professional attention — rather than patience — is one of the most important skills a post-procedure patient can develop.
Call Your Clinic Within Hours
Contact your clinic promptly if you experience:
Spreading redness accompanied by fever — may indicate cellulitis or another infection requiring in-person evaluation.
Severe or worsening pain after an initial period of improvement — could signal developing infection or vascular compromise.
Excessive bleeding that does not stop with gentle pressure after the first 24 hours.
Unilateral (one-sided) swelling — particularly if rapid or painful, as this can indicate vascular compromise.
Seek Immediate Emergency Care
Do not wait for your clinic to respond. Go directly to emergency services or the nearest emergency department for:
Signs of anaphylaxis — difficulty breathing, swelling of lips/tongue/throat, widespread hives, dizziness.
Extensive tissue necrosis — large areas of dark, blackened, or dying tissue at the operative site.
Heavy, uncontrolled hemorrhage.
Monitor and Inform Your Clinic
These findings are generally within the range of normal recovery, but your clinic should still be aware:
Mild, localized redness at the recipient site
Expected shock loss (temporary shedding that may resolve as hair cycles recover)
Normal post-operative crusting and tenderness in the first two weeks
What Should Your Clinic Provide for Complication Management?
A reputable clinic should have explicit systems in place to manage complications — not just prevent them. Before you commit, ask what the clinic provides for post-operative support.
Aftercare Support Standards
Minimum expectations for any quality provider:
Written aftercare instructions covering symptom monitoring, medication schedules, and activity restrictions.
24/7 contact numbers for post-procedure concerns — accessible on weekends and holidays.
Predicted response protocols for common complications (infection, shock loss, grafting issues).
Medication provisions including antibiotics and pain relief as prescribed.
Follow-up schedule with in-person review options, particularly in the first 7–14 days post-op.
Escalation pathway if local follow-up care is needed in your home country.
Questions to Ask Before Booking
Consider asking your prospective clinic directly:
Who do I contact directly — not just a coordinator — if I notice a complication after I leave the facility?
What is your protocol if I develop signs of infection or tissue necrosis?
Do you offer virtual follow-up consultations after I travel home?
If I need local medical care for a complication, what documentation can you provide to support that?
How Does Istanbul Medical Travel Change Complication Planning?
Choosing to have a hair transplant in Istanbul adds a layer of logistical complexity to complication planning. When you are thousands of kilometres from your clinic after the procedure, having a clear plan in place before you travel is essential.
Before You Travel Home
Confirm your clinic provides direct access to the surgeon or medical team post-procedure — not only to a patient coordinator.
Ensure your follow-up plan covers your full return timeline (most patients need 7–14 days of in-person monitoring before flying home).
Carry home the following: procedure notes, personalized aftercare instructions, complication protocols, and emergency contact numbers for your clinic.
Verify your surgeon's credentials and, where applicable, facility accreditation — these are markers of a structured complication response system.
After You Return Home
Ask your Istanbul clinic about virtual follow-up options for the weeks and months following your return.
Know your local emergency numbers before you need them.
Seek in-person evaluation with a local dermatologist or physician if any concerning symptoms arise — do not wait for symptoms to worsen.
Bring your procedure documentation to any local medical appointment so your provider has full context.
Insurance and Logistics
Consider travel insurance that includes medical coverage and explicitly covers complication management and repatriation if necessary.
Verify whether your policy covers follow-up care in your home country if a complication arises after you return.
Necrosis and infection signs always require in-person evaluation
If you observe dark or blackened tissue, spreading redness with fever, or rapid worsening of pain after an initial improvement period, seek local emergency care immediately — before contacting your Istanbul clinic. These signs can progress rapidly and need physical examination.
Quick Reference — When to Act
Use this three-tier framework as a rapid decision aid:
Feature
Action level
Symptoms
Next step
Monitor at home
Keep a symptom diary; contact clinic at next follow-up if symptoms persist beyond expected timelines.
Mild redness, expected crusting, normal tenderness, temporary shock loss
Note symptoms; include updates in your next follow-up report to the clinic.
Call clinic (within hours)
Describe symptoms clearly and ask for guidance on whether in-person evaluation is needed.
Spreading redness + fever; worsening pain after day 3; heavy bleeding; unilateral swelling
Contact the clinic's 24/7 medical line. Describe symptoms, onset time, and trend.
Seek emergency care (immediately)
Do not wait for clinic response. Physical examination and emergency intervention cannot be replaced by telemedicine.
Anaphylaxis signs; extensive necrosis; heavy hemorrhage
Go to nearest emergency department or call emergency services. Then notify your clinic.
Remember: complication protocols protect you. A clinic that has clear escalation procedures and communicates them proactively is demonstrating a commitment to patient safety — not just results.
If you are considering a hair transplant in Istanbul and want to understand how providers here plan for complication management and aftercare coordination, we can help connect you with vetted facilities.
1.Garg G, Garg S. “Complications of Hair Transplant Procedures: A Retrospective Study of 2896 Patients.” Indian Journal of Plastic Surgery. 2021. Accessed 2026-04-25.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34667413/
2.Kerure R, Patwardhan N. “Complications in Hair Transplantation.” Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery. 2018. Accessed 2026-04-25.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30534184/