Whatever Was Done, However It Turned Out — We’ll Look at It.
BeautsGO coordinates revision and correction surgery across Asia Pacific with partner surgeons who handle these cases every week. We are a medical-tourism facilitator, the clinics operate; we coordinate the case, the travel, and the follow-up. Whether your first surgery was done abroad and healed badly, an old implant has reached its replacement window, the result didn’t reach your goal, or you need reconstruction after injury or treatment, bring us the case discreetly.
Four Scenarios We Handle.
Revision is not one thing. The four cases below cover what arrives in our inbox most often. No questions about where, no judgment about why — your case fits one of these, or close enough that the partner team can still help.
Done Abroad, Healed Badly
First surgery was done in another country or a non-accredited clinic and the result is not what you wanted, asymmetry, contracture, infection sequelae, an outcome that does not look or feel right.
- Revision rhinoplasty after work done abroad
- Breast revision after non-accredited augmentation
- Filler complications, vascular events, migration, granulomas
- Asymmetry from a first surgery you cannot return to
Implants and Fillers Reaching End of Life
Devices that were placed five, ten, fifteen years ago and are now at the replacement window. Clinical and maintenance work, not a complication.
- Breast implant exchange or removal
- Capsular contracture management
- Filler dissolution and revision
First Surgery Didn’t Reach Your Goal
The first procedure was technically fine but did not reach the result you wanted. Often the smallest revision closes the gap.
- Secondary rhinoplasty for refinement
- Revision blepharoplasty for asymmetry or under-correction
- Liposuction touch-up after first contouring
Medically Necessary Reconstruction
Reconstruction after injury, oncological treatment, or scar work that is more clinical than cosmetic in motivation.
- Post-surgical scar revision
- Breast reconstruction after oncological treatment
- Trauma-related facial reconstruction within partner scope
What Revision Looks Like in Practice.
Four clinical patterns the partner network sees most often. Written as general patterns, not specific patients, each case is reviewed individually.
Rhinoplasty Revision After Work Done Abroad
When rhinoplasty done in a non-accredited clinic develops nasal tip asymmetry and mild contracture at the six-month mark, a multidisciplinary consult in Seoul typically begins with imaging and a skin-envelope assessment. Plans usually run single-stage where cartilage reshape is enough, two-stage when the soft tissue needs to settle first. The written plan includes a realistic “what this will and won’t change” line item before any deposit is taken.
Breast Implant Revision and Capsular Contracture
Patients arriving ten-plus years after augmentation often present with capsule thickening, asymmetry, or implant rupture on imaging. The standard sequence is ultrasound or MRI confirmation, partner-team review of size and pocket plane, then exchange, sometimes with capsulectomy, sometimes with fat-graft revision in place of a replacement implant. Recovery is usually two weeks in country, then follow-up by video.
Facial Filler Migration and Dissolution
When HA filler placed in lips, tear troughs, or jawline has migrated or accumulated unevenly, the first step is structured hyaluronidase dissolution staged over one or two visits, not a single aggressive session. Re-treatment, if any, is planned only after the tissue has fully reset, typically four to six weeks later. The plan often recommends doing less, not more.
Post-Surgical Scar Revision
For hypertrophic scarring or visible scar lines from a prior surgery (abdominoplasty, breast, or facial), partner teams combine surgical re-excision with laser, intralesional treatment, or pressure therapy. Realistic framing matters: scar revision improves appearance but does not erase scars. The written plan is explicit about what the result will and will not look like.
How We Coordinate a Revision Case.
Revision differs from a first-time procedure in the work that happens before any clinic visit. Four steps the coordinator walks through with you.
Confidential Intake
A brief written description, optional photos and prior records, shared only with the BeautsGO coordination team and the partner clinics you choose to involve. No marketing use. You can ask for your file to be deleted at any time.
Multidisciplinary Partner Review
Revision cases are reviewed by more than one specialist, for example, a rhinoplasty surgeon and a soft-tissue specialist, or a plastic surgeon and a dermatologist. This cross-discipline review is the difference between revision work and first-time surgery, and it is built into how the partner network operates.
Written Plan With Honest Scope
You receive a written plan that names what the partner team can and cannot change, expected staging, recovery windows, and an estimated cost range. If the case is out of scope for our network, we say so honestly and explain why. You are not charged for review.
12-Month Coordinator Continuity
After the procedure, the same coordinator stays on the line for twelve months. Document handoff to your home-country doctor, follow-up imaging review, and complication routing back to the treating clinic: the same continuity model BeautsGO uses for any case in our aftercare program.
What We Won’t Do.
A short list of things you will not hear from a coordinator on our team, because they would be wrong to say.
Discretion and Privacy.
Revision inquiries are handled differently from general inquiries. The default is discretion.
- Your inquiry stays inside the BeautsGO coordination team and the specific partner clinics you choose to involve.
- Past surgical records and photos are used only for the partner team’s case review.
- Your information is not used in BeautsGO marketing, no social posts, no testimonials, no before/after pages.
- You can request deletion of your file at any time, and we confirm in writing once it is done.
Frequently Asked Questions.
Can you review my case if I don’t have my original surgical records?
Yes. The partner team can assess from current presentation, recent photos, your written account of what was done and when, and any imaging you can obtain locally. Original operative notes help but are not a prerequisite for the first review.
Can I send a written description first, without photos?
Yes. The initial inquiry can be text only. Photos become useful when the partner team is drafting a written plan and scoping cost, not at first contact. You decide what to share and when.
What happens if the partner team says they can’t help?
You are not charged. You receive a written explanation of why a revision is not advisable now, and what condition or timing would change that. For example, waiting for tissue to settle, treating an underlying issue first, or referring back to your original surgeon.
How much more does revision surgery cost than the first surgery?
Revision typically runs 1.3 to 2 times the cost of a comparable first-time procedure because it is more complex, additional imaging, longer operative time, often more conservative staging. Specific figures are quoted per case after review; we do not publish standard price lists for revision work.
What if the surgeon changes the plan once I arrive in Korea?
The written plan agreed before travel is the working contract. In-person pre-op assessment can refine details (exact technique, staging, recovery window) but should not flip the plan’s direction. If a partner clinic recommends a materially different approach, your coordinator pauses the schedule so you can decide without time pressure.
Can I do a video consultation before flying out?
Yes. Most partner clinics offer paid video consultations with the operating surgeon. If you proceed to treatment, the consultation fee is typically credited against the surgical fee.
Quietly, on Your Timeline, With Someone Who’s Seen This Before.
Send a short message, a paragraph is enough. The coordination team will reply within one business day with whatever the next step looks like for your case.
Medical Disclaimer. BeautsGO is a medical tourism facilitator and is not a medical provider. We coordinate cases between prospective patients and independent, licensed hospitals and clinics in our verified partner network. All clinical decisions, diagnoses, and treatments remain solely between the patient and the chosen provider. Information on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual results vary and outcomes are not guaranteed. Always consult a qualified medical professional before undergoing any procedure. See the full medical disclaimer for the complete terms.