Prejuvenation: Preventative Botox, Collagen Banking, and What Evidence Supports
Prejuvenation combines preventative Botox, collagen-stimulating treatments, and early skincare to delay visible aging. Here is what the evidence supports — and where it…
Neuromodulators, dermal fillers, biostimulators, and the longevity question. Label-first, comparison-shaped.
Prejuvenation combines preventative Botox, collagen-stimulating treatments, and early skincare to delay visible aging. Here is what the evidence supports — and where it…
Xeomin typically lasts 3 to 4 months for cosmetic use. Learn the onset timeline, what affects duration, how it compares to Botox and Daxxify, and when to schedule…
Botox and Dysport are both botulinum toxin A, but they differ in onset speed, diffusion behavior, unit conversion, and cost per session. Here is what the labels and the…
Sculptra does not produce instant results like hyaluronic acid fillers. Initial changes appear at 4–6 weeks, with full results at 3–6 months as collagen builds.
Non-surgical rhinoplasty uses hyaluronic acid filler to reshape the nose in under 30 minutes, but it cannot reduce size, fix breathing, or replace surgery.
Sculptra costs $600–$1,200 per vial, with most patients needing 2–4 vials across 2–3 sessions totaling $2,000–$5,000.
Tear trough filler costs $650–$1,500 per syringe in the US, but the real question is whether your provider has the anatomy training to inject safely near the eye.
Dysport costs $4–$7 per unit but requires 2.5–3x more units than Botox. Explains the unit conversion, FDA dosing, why per-unit price is misleading without it, and how to…
Daxxify lasts a median of 6 months in clinical trials — longer than any other FDA-approved cosmetic neurotoxin. Here is what the evidence actually says about duration,…
Restylane Lyft and Juvéderm Voluma are the two HA fillers FDA-approved for cheek augmentation. They differ in G-prime, lifting capacity, duration, and cost.