Holiday Sale: 20% Off
Botox, Juvederm and Skin Care

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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sale on botox, juvederm and skin care

Holiday Sale: 20% Off Botox, Juvederm and Skin Care

Join Dr Elaine Cook and staff at Advanced Skin Treatment Center, 2609 Wolflin Village, Amarillo to celebrate the start of the Holiday Season with an Open House on Thursday, November 17 from 8am to 8pm in conjunction with the annual Wolflin Village celebration. This is a sale you won’t want to miss!

In addition to offering 20% off on all Dr. Elaine’s® Advanced Skin Treatment Skin Care, we have reserved the entire day for patients wanting Botox® and Juvederm® treatments at 20% off! It doesn’t get much better than that. Most people want to look their best around friends and relatives during the holidays especially for holiday photos. With this special, you can ‘Lose Ten Years in Ten Minutes’ and save 20%!

Relax the wrinkles between your eye brows, across your forehead and the crows feet outside the eye area with Botox. With Juvedermyou can plump up the ‘parenthesis’ wrinkles between your nose and the outside corners of your mouth, plump up your lips and fill in the areas below the outside edges of your mouth to give your face a more youthful look. Whether you’re a veteran to these procedures or want to try them for the first time, you should call today to schedule your appointment because we expect the slots to fill up quickly!

Botox and Juvederm first come, first serve, by appointment only. Call 806-358-1117  or email us at skincare@skintreatment.com today to schedule your appointment.

Top 10 Skin Tightening Tips

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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Top 10 Skin Tightening Tips
From A Cosmetic Dermatologist

  1. Take prevention seriously. Start protecting your skin early from daily sun exposure, by wearing sunscreen every day. Don’t tan. Don’t smoke. Use a retinoid, antioxidant, peptides and an alpha hydroxy acid daily. It’s never too late to start.
  2. Non-invasive skin tightening procedures like Thermage work best on mild to moderate skin sagging. Start these procedures early and plan to do them intermittently every couple of years to tighten and slow down sagging. Don’t wait until you have pronounced sagging.
  3. Dermal fillers like Juvederm and stimulatory fillers like Sculptra not only make you look better today, they actually provide the right environment for your skin to manufacture additional collagen. Don’t put it off when you start to see early loosening of the skin.
  4. Take care of your teeth. You need them. Loss of teeth leads to loss of facial bone structure, accelerating sagging. Do everything you can to avoid having teeth pulled and dentures placed.
  5. If you are thinking about surgical tightening procedures like a facelift, choose your plastic surgeon carefully. Opt for structured formal training in plastic surgery, certification in Plastic Surgery by the American Board of Medical Specialties, and experience over glossy ads, media coverage, and smooth bedside manner.  Be cautious about internet reviews; some glowing reviews are planted by the physician, and some bad reviews are planted by a competitor. Get recommendations from friends who have used the surgeon, and from trusted physicians and nurses. Be a little careful with taking all referrals at face value, sometimes the physician you ask is a personal friend of the surgeon. Plastic surgeons often give nurses a professional discount, which could cloud their judgment. Ask multiple people. Get second opinions.
  6. This goes for cosmetic dermatologists too. They should be certified by the American Board of Medical Specialties in Dermatology. Get personal recommendations from people you trust who have used them.
  7. Don’t get set on having a specific procedure based on something you read on the internet or saw on a TV show. If you have done your homework, your cosmetic dermatologist or plastic surgeon is very experienced in evaluating your face, your medical condition and your desires and deciding which particular procedure is best for you. Be specific in what kind of results you want, how much money you can spend, how much recovery time you can afford. Then let the surgeon guide you in which procedure is right for you. If you don’t feel the physician is the right fit, get a second opinion.
  8. Follow your plastic surgeons instructions. Be truthful about your medical history. Don’t lie about smoking. Don’t agree to quit, then sneak “just a couple” while you are recovering from a facelift. If you are having problems after surgery, insist on being seen. Good plastic surgeons will want to see you. They don’t like complications either.
  9. Aim for a natural, but rejuvenated look. You are never going to be 28 again, or look like the photo you brought in of yourself at 28. Get over it. Be realistic.
  10. Know in advance that your definition of “recovery time” after surgery and the surgeons is the same. Ask specifically when you can expect to be there. There is a difference between “most of the bruising and swelling will be gone” and “no one will know I have had surgery”. Ask for a specific time frame. Then double it and plan accordingly.

Bonus Tip: Don’t decide on an invasive surgical procedure based on an infomercial.

Top 10 Anti-Aging Cosmetic Skin Filler Tips–Part 2

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top 10 anti aging cosmetic skin filler tips part 2

The rest of my top 10 anti-aging cosmetic skin filler tips to Restore Volume–Reduce Lines, Give Youthful Fullness and Lift Sagging Skin.

The second 5:

6) Face lift without filler = caught in a wind tunnel look

There are some people who don’t need filler after a face lift and do look good with a face lift alone. But many people, thin women especially, and most women in general, really benefit from either targeted Juvederm or Restylane, or overall increased fullness from Sculptra. In fact, the volume replacement alone is often called liquid lift or liquid face lift. Some women get enough tightening and lifting from volume replacement alone or volume replacement + Thermage, called Thema-Fill. Some don’t and need a surgical face-lift.

Just as full and loose isn’t a good look, neither is tight and pulled.

7) If you don’t like it–reverse it

I am always amazed at the number of patients who come in and tell me that they got filler elsewhere, didn’t like it because of a bump, or weirdly done lips or something else, but put up with it for a year. The hyaluronic acid fillers Juvederm, Juvederm Plus, Restylane and Perlane (with or without anesthetic) can be reversed with an injection of hyaluronidase.

If only life would let us reverse our mistakes so easily.

8) Don’t use fillers not approved by the FDA for use in the U.S.

There are a lot of fillers approved or used in other countries. Some are safe. Some are not. There are plenty of filler options that have been approved by the FDA for use in the U.S. Stick with them.

Why risk it?

9) Don’t be stupid and order fillers off the internet and do it yourself in your bathroom

Because, of course, you can trust everything on the internet. They really care. And you could end up looking like this do it yourself filler injection.

We have already talked about this.

10) Hang on to your teeth

While not strictly related to aesthetic filler issues, if I can give one bit of non-sunscreen related advice–hang on to your teeth. When teeth are pulled and dentures placed, the age related loss of bone in the upper and lower jaw is greatly accelerated. Just like astronauts lose bone mass in low gravity conditions, bone needs pressure placed on it to avoid de-mineralization. The pressure transmitted through the teeth with chewing keeps the bone strong. With dentures the pressure is not transmitted to the bone and bone in the jaw is lost. As the bone is reabsorbed, the mouth collapses inward and the cheeks hollow. Not  uncommonly, the chin muscle becomes hyperactive in an effort to hold the dentures in the mouth, further pushing the mouth inward. Take care of your teeth. You need them.

Make friends with your cosmetic dentist. Or marry one.

Next: Step #4 in a cosmetic dermatologist’s anti-aging rejuvenation plan:

Resurface Skin Texture–Reduce Lines, Wrinkles, Pore Size, Scars

Top 10 Anti-Aging Cosmetic Filler Tips–Part 1

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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top 10 anti-aging cosmetic skin filler tips

Let’s finish Restore Volume–Reduce Lines, Give Youthful Fullness and Lift Sagging Skin with my top 10 anti-aging cosmetic skin filler tips.

The first 5:

1) If you can only afford one anti-aging treatment–do cosmetic filler injections

Doing aesthetic filler injections is one of my very favorite procedures because it makes such an improvement in giving a healthy, youthful appearance. But you do have to be realistic about how many syringes you need, and the results that you can achieve with the number of syringes you can afford. It takes a certain volume to get a certain result. It is fine to do it a little at a time as you can afford it, but to say that “filler didn’t work” when you needed three syringes but only did one is not a fair test.

I always try to stay grounded in reality.

2) Don’t expect filler injections to remove etched lines

The hyaluronic acid fillers Juvederm and Restylane plump up wrinkles from below and provide lost fullness. But if the line is etched from being folded ten million times, you will need skin resurfacing to really smooth the sharp line. If you stretch the skin and the wrinkle totally disappears, usually filler is all you need. If there is still a surface crease, you will need resurfacing. But either way the line will look a lot better after filler.

It’s always better to see the glass half full.

3) Treat eyebrows and temples

Yes, the lips, the corners of the mouth, and the smile lines are the first priority; cheeks next. But don’t forget the eyebrows and temples. With age, the eyebrows thin and begin to droop, especially at the outer comers. The fat that sits on the brow bone begins to descend, taking the brows down with it. A relatively small amount of Juvederm or Restylane in the outside wing of the eyebrow gives 3 dimensional structure and helps reduce hooding of the upper eyelid. Sunken temples give you a skeletal look and are aging.

Halloween was last night.

4) Treat corners of the mouth

Turned down corners of the mouth make you look unhappy and older. Juvederm or Restylane is injected below and to the side of the corner to turn it up. It breaks up the line from the corner down to the chin. You look happy.

Even when you’re not.

5) With age, thin faces need volume

They do.

Believe me.

Next: Part 2 of  Top 10 Anti-Aging Cosmetic Filler Tips

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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lip filler injections

One of the most common complaints I hear are about lipstick lines that radiate around the lips. This is usually followed by “and I never even smoked!” The causes of lipstick lines and loss of lip volume are several: loss of soft tissue and bone with chronologic aging, sun damage causing breakdown of elastic and collagen fibers, and repetitive muscle action. And, of course, smoking worsens all of these by both the direct toxin effect on the tissue and the habitual pursing of the lips.

The deeper the lines are around the mouth and the more the mouth sinks inward, the more aged you look. Additionally the muscle in the chin often becomes hyperactive and pushes the center of the lower lip upward and the corners downward. You see this most prominently in women with dentures but it occurs with most people as they age. Botox treats this very effectively with as little as 5 units per treatment.

Filler treatment of the lips can be very effective, but it is also the area where improperly done treatment has the potential to make you look worse. I used to get “don’t make me look like Goldie Hawn in First Wives Club”, then “don’t make me look like Angelina Jolie”, now “make me look like Angelina Jolie.” News flash–there is not enough filler on the planet to make you (or me) look like Angelina Jolie.

But there are some basic rules that should be followed. Remember these are IMHO, your doctor may feel differently:

  • Lip augmentation should look as natural as possible. You are not a duck or a trout. You are not Angelina Jolie. You want your lips to look like they belong on your face, only a little fuller and with less lipstick lines.
  • The outer corners of the lip should be filled to keep a youthful wide mouth. Don’t just fill the center and the lipstick lines.
  • Turned down outer corners of the lips should be buttressed with filler so that they are either in neutral position or turn up.
  • Most lipstick lines are best treated with filler in the red part of the lips themselves and in the junction of the red and skin, not just treated with filler in the skin above the lips. Sometimes a combination works best.
  • Permanent implants in the lips are a bad idea. There may be some out there that don’t look bizarre but I have never seen them.
  • The best fillers for lips are the hyaluronic acid fillers, Juvederm or Restylane. I usually use Juvederm Ultra  XC, as I think it looks and feels more natural and smooth. Thicker and more permanent fillers such as Sculptra, Artefill, Radiesse are not meant for use in the lips and may give lumps and stiffness.
  • Your lips may feel stiff for 3-5 days after treatment with hyaluronic acid. This resolves.
  • The ratio of the vertical dimension of the upper to lower lip should be 1:1.6. Your bottom lip should be more full than the upper lip. I often have requests to treat the upper lip lines and to not treat the lower lip because the patient would prefer to use the rest of the filler on the smile lines or elsewhere. Don’t do it if the upper lip becomes as large as or larger than the lower lip. You will look weird, especially in profile. Spring for another syringe if you need it.
  • I don’t inject fat in lips because I don’t think it is as controllable and it is less predictable in terms of how much will last and how much will reabsorb. If you have fat injected into your lips, be prepared for significant swelling lasting at least 3 weeks, regardless of what you are told. Better to be pleasantly surprised than upset.

The best lip augmentations are those that no one knows you’ve had. It can be done. It does take an experienced physician injector, an aesthetic sensibility and the ability to know when to stop. Do it right or don’t do it at all.

Next: Cosmetic skin filler tips

Why you don’t want to look bizarre

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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cosmetic dermal fillers horsey look

While cosmetic skin fillers have the potential to give you a big bang for the buck in a positive way; if not done properly they can also give you a bang for the buck in a negative way–an explosion, if you will. Bad cosmetic skin fillers decisions are not uncommon.

The most common filler nightmare causing an unattractive look are either bad lip injections, or too much filler in and around the mouth and smile lines ignoring the cheeks, and temples. Or both. This leads to the dreaded “trout pout” or a “horsey” look. That is why your doctor needs to do an comprehensive filler evaluation and give you a plan.

In some parts of the country–I’m looking at you SoCal in general and Hollywood in particular–this look is more prominent, and sometimes even desired by patients who are used to seeing other women with similar filler distribution. As we discussed previously, these are women who are often very thin and have lost a lot of facial fat. Filling the central lower face only causes an abnormally large lower face, and lacks the youthful upper cheek fullness. Many times, if the physician tries to discuss cheek and temple filling, the patient thinks it will make her look fat, and resists.

And then there are the disasters. I see these images of cosmetic skin filler disasters and wonder what they were thinking.  I bet you have seen them too. Interestingly, often these people think they look good because they are focusing on a particular problem, lip wrinkles for instance, and not looking at the whole picture.

Look at the whole picture.

Next: A word about lips

Fillers: Now the fine print

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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cosmetic dermal fillers risks

Once again, these are the risks and instructions I discuss with my patients. If you are not my patient, you should listen to what your doctor tells you. I know you get tired of hearing this, but my lawyer doesn’t.


In general, the hyaluronic acid fillers last 1 year in the smile lines and lips; longer under the eyes, in the cheeks and temples. Sculptra lasts 2 years on average. Your filler may not last as long, or it may last longer. Results with Juvederm are seen immediately and settle in over a couple of weeks. Results with Sculptra are seen within 6 months.

I am always asked “do filler injections hurt?”  In our office we use a anesthetic cream. The hyaluronic acid fillers now have anesthetic in them. Sculptra is mixed with anesthetic. With the combination of anesthetic in the filler itself, and in a pre-treatment cream, most of our patients find the procedure very tolerable. If needed for lip treatment, additional anesthetic can be given in a dental block just like at the dentist. Now that Juvederm has anesthetic in it, only about 10% of our patients request a dental block. Before the anesthetic was added, 99.9% of our patients wanted a dental block.

There are risks with any medical procedure. The main risks with volume replacement and wrinkle treatment with cosmetic skin fillers are: bruising, infection, swelling, lumps, mild tenderness. Bruising is the most common problem after cosmetic dermal filler injections but can be reduced a great deal if you follow the instructions in my post “if you don’t want to look like I beat you with a stick, read this.” So read it.

Sculptra, or any of the longer lasting fillers, like Radiesse or Artefill, should not be used in the lips, or in the area immediately around the lips or eyes. If used in those areas, long lasting bumps under the skin can occur. Occasionally, they develop in other parts of the face. After Sculptra injections, our patients massage the treated area several times a day for 2 weeks to help prevent bumps under the skin.

Swelling after treatment is rarely a problem, the exception being fat injections in or around the lips, in which swelling may persist for weeks. Rarely unusual swelling occurs months to years after any of the fillers. It is more persistent with the longer lasting fillers Radiesse and Artefill.

Infection is rare but occasionally occurs. The risk is higher with the longer lasting fillers.

Compression of a blood vessel by the filler after injection very rarely occurs, but if not corrected, can cause death of the tissue overlying the occluded vessel. Symptoms include severe pain, gray discoloration (not the same as bruising), often with a light gray or white center, occurring within the first 24 hours after injection. It is most common on the cheeks or the area between the eyebrows. Immediate treatment is required to prevent ulceration of the tissue. If the hyaluronic acid fillers Juvederm or Restylane are involved, they are dissolved with a an injection of a medication, hyaluronidase. Compression of a blood vessel by the longer acting fillers, such as Radiesse, are more difficult to treat.

Occasionally, a patient either develops a lump, too much fullness in an area, or simply doesn’t like the result of treatment (usually lips–and we will talk about lip disasters later). One of the advantages of the hyaluronic acid fillers is that these can be reversed. I don’t know why some doctors don’t offer to reverse an area of filler if the patient is unhappy. I have seen patients, treated elsewhere how suffered with unsightly lips or other areas for a year. Not uncommonly they have seen the injecting doctor multiple times with their concerns, but were not offered reversal with hyaluronidase. So if that is you, know that there are options. In life, the ability to reverse a mistake is worth a lot.

There are quite a few fillers used that have not been approved by the FDA for use in the US. Yes, some doctors in the US use them anyway. Yes, some are used “all over the world.” Yes, some have good safety records. Some don’t. Just say no.

Next: Why you don’t want to look bizarre.

Don’t Be a “Don’t”

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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cosmetic dermal filllers don't be a don't

One of the hallmarks of youth and beauty is symmetry, i.e., one half is the mirror image of the other. When one eyebrow is up or down, when one eyelid droops and the other doesn’t, when one cheek is falling more than the other, the symmetry is marred and to our subconscious mind, the person is less attractive.

Classically, aesthetic facial beauty is characterized by the ‘rule of thirds’  in which the face is divided by three horizontal lines. The top third is from the hairline to between the inside ends of the eyebrow;  the middle third is from the inside ends of the eyebrows to immediately under end of the nose; and the lower third is from immediately  under the end of the nose to the tip of the chin.

Each third should be equal in vertical dimension, and each should appear equally dominant. When they are not, as demonstrated by someone with a very large forehead, large nose, or weak chin, again we subconsciously see that person as less attractive.

It’s my job as a cosmetic dermatologist to try to improve a patient’s symmetry and balance the thirds of their face.

Unfortunately, one of the things that I sometimes see are patients who either have had treatment elsewhere,  are Hollywood or Reality TV stars, or just people on the street, in whom the basic rules have not been applied. You have probably seen them too. Sometimes you just know that they are “off” but not entirely sure why.

The most common of these mistakes are augmenting the lips, smile lines, and corners of the mouth, without considering the cheeks, and temples. This is especially noticeable  on a thin individual with fat wasting of the cheeks and temples. They develop a “horsey” look with a prominent lower face, sunken cheeks and temples. The epitome of this look is the very diet conscious, compulsive exerciser, on Adderall and HCG, with a bunch of filler in her lips and smile lines in an attempt to compensate for her falling cheeks. Good thing that doesn’t describe me.

That’s why it is important to develop a plan with your cosmetic dermatologist, that addresses all of the areas of volume loss, to restore youthful symmetry and balance.

Then you won’t end up on TMZ as a “Don’t” with strangers commenting on your looks.

Next: Now the fine print

How many and how much will it cost?

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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cosmetic skin fillers costs

What are the best aesthetic fillers for each area that needs treatment?

Each individual is different, and each physician has his or her preferences, but in general ,my choices and the average number of syringes used:

  • Marionette lines and corners of the mouthJuvederm Ultra XC or Juvederm Ultra Plus XC--1-2 syringes split both sides
  • Lips–Juvederm Ultra XC-1 syringe
  • Nasolabial folds (smile lines)—Juvederm Ultra XC or Juvederm Ultra Plus XC
  • –1-2 syringes split both sides
  • Under eye hollowsRestylane-L —1 syringe split both sides
  • CheeksJuvederm Ultra Plus XC—2 syringes, one for each side.
  • Temples–Juvederm Ultra Plus XC—1 syringe or Sculptra
  • If doing overall “re-volumizing”-Sculptra 2 vials per treatment, 3 treatments, (total 6 vials)

What do cosmetic skin fillers cost?

These are our current prices per syringe or vial for cosmetic skin fillers.

Of course they may change as our filler costs change.  We also have a lot of package discounts and intermittent specials on fillers. And the manufacturers offer rebates and discounts which help you out too.

Juvederm Ultra XC– $599

  • Two or more syringes are $562.50
  • Plus you get 5 units of Botox for chin free. This helps the turn down of the mouth and jowls.

Juvederm Ultra Plus XC $625

  • Two or more syringes are $587.50
  • Plus you get 5 units of Botox for chin free. This helps the turn down of the mouth and jowls.

Sculptra Aesthetic– $899 per vial

  • For a 3 treatment series, of 2 vials per treatment (total 6 vials)– $4999

When Juvederm Ultra XC and Juvederm Ultra Plus XC came out with anesthetic, our costs went up a substantial amount but we decided not to increase our prices for cosmetic filler. We thought it was important to hold costs down for our patients in this economy.

Are fillers expensive? I think that they are well worth the costs, because you really get a bang for the buck. When budget is an issue, our patients often start with one or two syringes and then add more later. And many patients only need one or two syringes to get the improvement they want. Also, at the time of retreatment, it is not unusual to not need as much treatment, as some of the results are lasting.

For more information on our current cosmetic procedures on sale and discounts check our web site.

Next: Don’t ignore the obvious

Decisions, decisions

Posted by: Dr Elaine

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soft tissue fuller decisions

The first thing that I do when a patient comes in for a skin rejuvenation consultation is to try to determine whether they need volume correction, as that is likely to give them a big bang for the buck.  I look at all of the areas where volume loss causes aging changes and decide between a targeted filling of a few areas, reduction in specific wrinkles, or a broader volume restoration to larger areas of the face.

Cosmetic Skin Filler Evaluation:

1.    The first areas I look at are the corners of the mouth and the creases leading down from the corner of the mouth to the chin. These “marionette lines”,  that look make you look like a ventriloquist’s dummy, are the most aging changes. They appear to drag your face down and accentuates neck and jowl looseness. So the first thing I recommend is to fill those in.
2.    Then I look at the lips themselves. Often they have lost volume and have radiating lines. I like to plump the lips primarily to treat the lines around the mouth. If I just inject the radiating lines, often the patient will get a “Marge Simpson” upper lip with prominence of the area above the red part of the lip. We will talk more about lips later as they are the area that have potential to look bizarre if not done properly.
3.    Next are the nasolabial folds from the side of the end of the nose down to the mouth. If present, they cause a harsh appearance.
4.    The cheeks have usually lost volume, causing a flat face and pushing down on everything below them. This area is often neglected in filler treatments.
5.    If there are hollows under the eyes causing a tired look, we talk about fillers there.
6.    Last is the temples. After the other areas are corrected, if the temples look sunken then we need to address those.
7.    After I look at the entire face I decide whether we need to fill in certain areas, usually with a hyaluronic acid filler, or do a more complete, less targeted, overall filling with Sculptra.

There are a bunch of fillers available. These are the most commonly used:

I tend to stick with the hyaluronic acid fillers for targeted area and Sculptra Aesthetic for overall volume improvement. Hyaluronic acid fillers are reversible if needed, and Sculptra is great for overall volume improvement. Fat injections involve removing some of the patient’s fat and injecting it into the area to be filled. It is nice because most of us have a ready supply, but fat injections are more unpredictable with some of the fat not surviving transplantation. Also fat is less precise in placement, and causes a fair amount of swelling especially in the lips. I have seen major swelling last for 3 weeks or more. My patients won’t tolerate that. That said, some physicians do it very successfully.

Juvederm Ultra XC, and Restylane-L are for more superficial placements and Juvederm Ultra Plus XC and Perlane-L are for deeper filling. All 4 have a local anesthetic in them which decreases discomfort. All are sold by the syringe. The hyaluronic acid fillers give immediate improvement that lasts on average 1 year. At one year, more or less, we will do another treatment.

Sculptra Aesthetic is a powder that is mixed with an anesthetic and is for overall improvement. Sculptra is designed to be given over several (average of 3) treatments and lasts on average 2 years. At around 2 years most patients choose to do another treatment. Most patients do not need to do 3 treatments again at that time.

Sculptra (and to a lesser degree the hyaluronic acid fillers) are bio-stimulatory, meaning that they actually cause you to make more of your own collagen so some of the results are lasting. The improvement with Sculptra evolves over a 6 month time period so you gradually look better and better.

Fillers are my favorite procedure because they make such a difference and I enjoy the artistry of sculpting the face. I do all of the filler injections in my office. They are more difficult to get right than you might think. If you see someone and you think “wow, look at those bizarre lips” or if you can tell they have filler injections, they have not been served well. I always work to get a completely natural look, only better.

Sounds like a lot of filler injections. How much do we need?

Next: What is it going to take?