Any surgery carries some risk, and surgery for rhinitis is no exception. However, rhinitis surgery is a very common procedure in ENT and is done every day, so it is relatively safe. If the patient’s pre-operative blood tests, chest X-ray and ECG are all fine, there is usually not much risk. If the patient has high blood pressure, high blood sugar, and a bad heart, the risk of general anesthesia surgery will be greater, sometimes inducing a heart attack, and postoperative pneumonia will be combined, but after active treatment the patient’s condition will all improve significantly. The main purpose of rhinitis surgery is to ablate the enlarged and hyperplastic inferior turbinates and improve the patient’s ventilation, and the patient can be considered for discharge about a week after surgery, after which he needs to return to the hospital for regular review to clarify the recovery of the operated area. Patients are also advised not to smoke and not to drink alcohol.