Intelligent anti-aging skin care based on independent research     
Lose wrinkles, keep your bank account!     
Like Smart Skin Care on Facebook
 
Skin Care 101
Skin Care Basics
Skin Protection
Skin Biology
Biology of Aging
Ingredient Guide
Skin & Nutrition
Skin Conditions
 
Anti-Aging Treatments
Topical Actives
Wrinkle Fillers
Noninvasive
Invasive
 
Skin Care Smarts
Smart Choices
Best Practices
Quick Tips
 
Reviews
Product Reviews
Reviews By Brand
 
How-To Infopacks
Skin Rejuvenation
DIY Skin Care
Skin & Nutrition
Eye Skin Care
 
Community & Misc
Forums
Search
 
   
You are here: Anti-Aging Skin Treatments > Wrinkle Fillers

Dermal & Soft-Tissue Fillers for Facial Rejuvenation (a.k.a. Wrinkle Fillers)

This section contains information on dermal and soft-tissue fillers for cosmetic facial rejuvenation. They are often called wrinkle fillers, which is less accurate but more concise. Wrinkle fillers are used primarily to correct localized facial defects, such as lines, furrows, folds, pitted scars, skin depressions due to fat loss, and the like.

Most wrinkles fillers are administered via injection, although a few require a small incision. In some cases, wrinkle fillers are the only minimally invasive way to correct certain types of defects, such as deep folds and furrows, depressed scars or the areas of subcutaneous fat loss. However, small defects, such as fine lines or mild-to-moderate wrinkles should be treated by topical agents before treatments like fillers or lasers are considered. For motion wrinkles (lines caused by facial movements), the optimal tactics in many cases is to try Botox first. In fact, even if Botox has failed, it may still be a good adjunct to a filler because simply injecting a filler does not eliminate the cause of a motion wrinkle.

Even though a few wrinkle fillers have been in use for decades, the majority are relatively new and their long-term effects are unknown. This is partly mitigated by the fact that manufacturers often try to develop new fillers based on human or animal tissue, natural biopolymers, or synthetic polymers with a history of other medical uses. Still, no wrinkle filler is ideal; each has a unique profile of effectiveness, durability, biocompatibility, side effects, costs, risks and uncertainties. The trick is to determine if a filler is an optimal solution in your particular case, and, if so, which one is likely to be the best fit. Try to learn as much as you can first - you can start with the articles below. The "let's learn by trying" attitude may works for topicals, but tends to backfire for more invasive and costly treatments.

Collagen-Based Fillers
Overview of collagen-based fillers
Bovine collagen (ZyDerm 1, ZyDerm 2, ZyPlast)
Human collagen (CosmoDerm 1, CosmoDerm 2, CosmoPlast)
Autologous human collagen (Autologen)
Acellular human cadaveric dermis (AlloDerm)
Micronized acellular human cadaveric dermis (Cymetra)

Hyaluronic Acid-Based Fillers
Overview of hyaluronic acid-based fillers
Non-animal stabilized hyaluronic acid gel (Restylane, Captique, Juvederm)
Animal hyaluronic acid gel (Hylaform, Hylaform Plus)

Hydroxylapatite-Based Fillers
Overview of hydroxylapatite-based dermal fillers
Hydroxylapatite microspheres (Radiesse)

Autologous Transplant-Based Fillers
Overview of autologous transplant-based fillers
Autologous fat
Cultured autologous human fibroblasts (Isolagen)

Synthetic Polymer-Based Fillers
Overview of synthetic polymer-based fillers
Polyacrylamide gel (Aquamid)
Polyalkylimide gel (Bio-Alcamid)
Poly-L-lactic-acid (Sculptra/NewFill)
Polymethylmethacrylate (ArteFill/ArteColl)


Related Links
Forum discussions of fillers
eMedicine: Facial Fat Grafting
eMedicine: Collagen Injections
eMedicine: Dermal Fillers


     






Home | About Us | Contact Us | Ask a Question

Copyright © 1999-2017 by Dr. G. Todorov / SmartSkinCare.com
Site Disclaimer | Copyright Certification

   
-- advertisements --