Revision is not simply “tightening more.” It is identifying the true reason the first result does not behave like normal anatomy.
Arm lift revision is often underestimated because the problem is usually not one-dimensional. A scar that widened, a contour that looks uneven in certain light, or a small segment of residual laxity can each have different anatomical causes. Treating all of them as “extra tightening” is how revision becomes escalation.
A responsible plan begins with anatomy and mechanics: how much of the remaining issue is skin redundancy versus residual fat, how transitions behave from axilla to elbow, and whether the scar is only visible or actually tethering and distorting deeper tissue. The dominant anatomical driver determines both what is possible and what would be unnecessary risk.
My philosophy is controlled refinement. The goal is a quieter silhouette and more natural drape, not aggressive transformation. In revision surgery, “better and stable” is often the safest target.
If you are considering revision, an evaluation focused on mechanism and trade-offs is the correct starting point.
