Your ultimate goal should be to make the Q&A useful for future readers, as well as the original poster of the question.
They don't get notified about changes you make, so you can leave a comment on the question to notify them about something important you changed. An @username
comment on your answer won't work unless the OP has already replied to your answer. (If @us... doesn't show the OP's username as a possible completion, you can't ping them with a comment there.)
If there was an error in your solution, you definitely should make an edit to address it. If the problem is serious enough that nobody should ever use your solution, even though it might appear to work, you can even delete your answer to prevent misleading people.
If your edit drastically changes your answer, taking a different approach altogether, it should maybe be a different post (and delete the old post), esp. if there was a discussion in comments on the wrong answer that's no longer relevant to the new answer.
In general though, it's ok to change your answer a lot, even if it's already accepted. The OP might un-accept it, but that's ok. As long as you think your edit makes your answer good enough to be the accepted answer to the question, go for it.
It's (very?) rare for an answer to be accepted before the answerer notices a fatal flaw. Even totally rewriting the answer, with maybe a note at the end that the old version had whatever flaw, is usually fine. The note at the end avoids confusion for anyone reading the comments later, if the comments are talking about the old version.
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horizontal rule tag. In most cases there's no real need to be explicit like that: just improve your answer and let the curious readers check the edit history. OTOH, I do occasionally add stuff with an explicit edit, eg with chameleon questions, or when modifying someone else's faulty answer when the original author is no longer active / doesn't respond to comments.