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Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face

In the quest for the “ideal” soft tissue filler, many diverse products have been developed. The expanding market of available fillers is a testament that no one product will ideally suit all patients or clinicians. In addition, the challenge of satisfying the criteria of an ideal filler has driven r...

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Autor principal: Burgess, Cheryl M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2699635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18046912
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author Burgess, Cheryl M
author_facet Burgess, Cheryl M
author_sort Burgess, Cheryl M
collection PubMed
description In the quest for the “ideal” soft tissue filler, many diverse products have been developed. The expanding market of available fillers is a testament that no one product will ideally suit all patients or clinicians. In addition, the challenge of satisfying the criteria of an ideal filler has driven researchers to take a variety of development paths. This has resulted in multiple categories to characterize soft tissue fillers. These fillers are categorized according to: (1) filler material, eg, autologous, natural, synthetic; (2) mechanism of action, eg, void filler, neocollagenesis, fibroblast stimulation; (3) patient type and profile, eg, younger versus older patient, rhytids versus “sinking and sagging” skin; or (4) durability of treatment effects, eg, temporary, semi-permanent, or permanent. Although strategies for soft tissue augmentation may be quite diverse, strategies should share a universal goal to address fat redistribution (atrophy and hypertrophy), the primary underlying morphological cause of facial aging. To accomplish this, volumizers are now available that are injected more deeply, resulting in the restoration of supportive structure and foundation. These can be used in combination with other products that are used more superficially for smoothing skin surfaces. As numerous soft tissue fillers enter the market, mechanisms and injection techniques become more divergent, and therefore require that the dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon receive adequate training to use products safely and effectively. This manuscript provides an overview of soft tissue fillers and their proper use.
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spelling pubmed-26996352009-06-23 Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face Burgess, Cheryl M Clin Interv Aging Reviews In the quest for the “ideal” soft tissue filler, many diverse products have been developed. The expanding market of available fillers is a testament that no one product will ideally suit all patients or clinicians. In addition, the challenge of satisfying the criteria of an ideal filler has driven researchers to take a variety of development paths. This has resulted in multiple categories to characterize soft tissue fillers. These fillers are categorized according to: (1) filler material, eg, autologous, natural, synthetic; (2) mechanism of action, eg, void filler, neocollagenesis, fibroblast stimulation; (3) patient type and profile, eg, younger versus older patient, rhytids versus “sinking and sagging” skin; or (4) durability of treatment effects, eg, temporary, semi-permanent, or permanent. Although strategies for soft tissue augmentation may be quite diverse, strategies should share a universal goal to address fat redistribution (atrophy and hypertrophy), the primary underlying morphological cause of facial aging. To accomplish this, volumizers are now available that are injected more deeply, resulting in the restoration of supportive structure and foundation. These can be used in combination with other products that are used more superficially for smoothing skin surfaces. As numerous soft tissue fillers enter the market, mechanisms and injection techniques become more divergent, and therefore require that the dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon receive adequate training to use products safely and effectively. This manuscript provides an overview of soft tissue fillers and their proper use. Dove Medical Press 2006-12 2006-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2699635/ /pubmed/18046912 Text en © 2006 Dove Medical Press Limited. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Reviews
Burgess, Cheryl M
Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title_full Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title_fullStr Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title_full_unstemmed Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title_short Principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
title_sort principles of soft tissue augmentation for the aging face
topic Reviews
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2699635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18046912
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