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Archive for the ‘injectable soft tissue fillers’ Category

Injectable Fillers - The Relationship between Cost and Longevity

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Injectable fillers provide a simple and immediate cosmetic treatment that is particularly good for the areas of the nasolabial folds (cheek-lip grooves) and for lip enhancement. While there are many different name brands of injectable fillers, they basically do the same thing (plump up the skin) even though there are some differences in what they are made of. These basic differences in makeup (collagen vs. hyaluronic acid vs particulated), while not conferring any different filling properties, are different in more than just the name also.

 
In theory, what you are primarily paying for with an injectable filler treatment is for how long it lasts. The least expensive injectable fillers, such as old-style Zyderm and Zyplast (pig collagen) or more modern Prevelle (hyaluronic acid), last about 6 to 12 weeks or less than three months. The longer-lasting fillers, such as Radiesse (dissolvable ceramic beads) and ArteFill (non-dissolving plastic beads), are by far the most expensive but they do last anywhere from 12 to 18 months after a single injection session. The real question is then…..how much are you paying for what length of time. (no true permanent injectable fillers exist at this time) You want to be sure that the price somehow correlates to how persistent the result is.

 
That can be a difficult task for any patient to decipher. Many times what a practitioner may charge may not necessarily correlate with the product’s behavior. But the purchase price to the injector (which does differ for all injectable fillers) is the same throughout the country for all syringes sold. Therefore, you can ask to see a price list or ask the price (per syringe) for the types of injectable fillers that they offer. This makes it easy to do comparison shopping…although beware that price may not be indicative of the injector’s experience or expertise.

 

Here in the midwest, very short-term (3 - 4 months) injectable filler treatments (one cc or a full syringe) will cost around $300 - $400,  medium-lasting (6 to 8 months)injectable fillers around $550 - $650, and long-lasting (9 to 18 months) injectable fillers around $850 - $1250. While these are price estimates for just one geographic area in the country, they do reflect the relative relationship between injectable filler cost and duration of action.

 
Dr. Barry Eppley
http://www.eppleyplasticsurgery.com
http://www.ologyspa.com
Clarian North Medical Center, Carmel, Indiana’
Clarian West Medical Center, Avon, Indiana’
Indianapolis

What’s New in Medical Skin Care? - Injectable Fillers

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

New Versions of Injectable Fillers keep coming…..and more are on the way!

Next to Botox coming out of a needle, the use of injectable fillers is only slightly less popular as a cosmetic injection method. While collagen was the only injectable filler for lines and wrinkles from 1981 to 2003, there has been a virtual explosion of new injectable fillers since then…..now numbering six commercially available fillers….and four of these have become available in the last year. And collagen as an injectable filler has now become of historic interest only.

 

The new revolution in injectable filler materials has been the change from collagen to hyaluronic acid. A natural sugar, hyaluronic acid (HA), lasts longer and has much less potential for adverse reactions than collagen. The battle amongst HA manufacturers revolves around the claim of which one is the longest lasting. Despite differing claims, conclusive proof that one type of HA lasts longer than the other remains lacking. Clinical trials for most manufacturers has compared their version of HA to collagen as the control. Few direct comparison studies have yet to be done. While the amount or concentration of HA per cc would suggest greater longevity, there are other issues of importance as well such as the degree of cross-linking. These issues will eventually sort themselves out but it is fair to tell patients that HA injections will last between 4 and 8 months on average, and some perhaps longer. One thing is for certain, however, and that is more variations of HA injectable fillers are coming….and such competition will drive the price of a syringe down. (which is more than can be said for Botox!)

 

Two non-HA injectable fillers also became commerically approved last year. I call these type of injectable fillers, particulated synthetic injectable fillers. The concept is that they contain a portion of non-resorbable beads or particles mixed in a carrier solution. Radiesse uses ceramic beads and ArteFill uses plastic beads. Either way, the beads do not go away and some percent of permanence remains. As a result, they last longer than the HA fillers even if 80 - 90% of the particulated filler does go away. Because they have the potential to become lumpy due to scarring around the beads, their use in the lips is not recommended. In theory, build-up of the beads can occur over time with multiple injections so that their effect may seem to last longer over time.

 

With such a wide selection of injectable fillers available today, it can be confusing to the patient. For the physician injector, it is important to use more than one of the available injectable fillers for different areas and different problems.

 

Dr Barry Eppley
http://www.eppleyplasticsurgery.com
http://www.ologyspa.com
Clarian North Medical Center, Carmel, Indiana
Clarian West Medical Center, Avon, Indiana
Indianapolis

Hyaluron Injectable Soft Tissue Fillers for Facial Lines and Wrinkles

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

The Science of Hyaluron Injectable Fillers in Indianapolis

 
The use of injectable materials for filling or plumping up facial lines and wrinkles dates back to 1981 in the U.S. when collagen injections became available. From 1981 to 2003, for over twenty years, injectable collagen was the only available facial filler. While the injection process was easy, the popularity of collagen injections was limited as its effects were very short-lived usually lasting around 6 weeks or so. Because the collagen material was bovine-derived (from cows), a skin test was required prior to injection and a small percent of patients had allergic reactions, thus not being capable of treatment. Since 2003, a new synthetic material has become commercially available and collagen is now ‘a material of historic interest’ primarily. This new material is hyaluron or hyaluronic acid.


Hyaluron (HA) is produced today by fermentation in cultures of equine streptococci. The fermented material is then stabilized via epoxidic cross-links of the glycosaminoglycan chains. As a result of this processing method, the HA material does not cause immunologic sensitization and virtually no risk of allergic reactions. Hyaluronan is a polysaccharide that is an essential component of the extracellular matrices in which all human tissues differentiate. In certain tissues, such as the vitreous cavity of the eye and synovial joint fluid, it is the major constituent. Unlike collagen, it is identical across all animal species and microbes. The largest amount of hyaluronan resides in skin, where it is present in both dermis and epidermis. Hyaluronan’s high capacity for holding water and high viscoelasticity give it some unique properties that are useful in various medical and pharmaceutical applications. Because it retains moisture, hyaluronan is used in some cosmetics to keep skin young and fresh-looking. As we age, the water-holding capacity of our skin decreases as hyaluronan depolymerizes. Therefore, the retention or insertion of hyaluronan into the skin is theoretically helpful in wrinkle reduction.
HA can be rather rapidly degraded and is ultimately metabolized in the liver. Modern processing methods have produced more stable forms of HA that have much longer in vivo retention times. As degradation occurs over time, water is attracted to the material at the site of implantation. As the HA concentration decreases, more water bonds to it thus helping with cosmetic persistence. This feature is what probably accounts for its longer volume retention effects than bovine collagen. (isovolemic degradation)
A variety of differing grades of transparent gels are available, based on the same type gel from highly concentrated (20mg/ml)stabilized HA, which varies in particle size and subsequent indication. Restylane has a particulate size of 100,000 gel particles/ml, flows through a 27 gauge needle, and is indicated for mid-dermal applications such as deeper wrinkle reduction, as well as lip augmentation, nasolabial folds, and glabellar creases. Restylane has even been successfully used in the treatment of tear trough deformities.14 Restylane Fine Lines has the highest concentration at 200,000 gel particles/ml, can be injected through a 30 gauge needle, and is indicated for thin superficial wrinkles. The lowest concentration gel is Perlane at 8,000 gel particles/ml which is injected through a 27 gauge needle and is intended for shaping facial contours, correcting deep folds, and for lip augmentation.15 Restylane was FDA-approved in December 2003, Perlane received its approval in 2007. There are numerous manufacturers of HA injectable fillers which, in addition to Restylane, includes Captique and Juvaderm.
The universal HA composition makes the need for pre-injection skin testing unnecessary as the risk for hypersensitivity reactions is minimal. It is easily injected and flows nicely through small-gauge needles. While not permanent, its persistence is reported to exceed bovine collagen with estimates of between 4 and 6 months post-injection.
Rare side effects, that I have not yet seen, include injection site inflammation at an incidence of 0.02% and local hypersensitivity reactions (swelling, erythema, and induration) at an incidence of 0.02% lasting a mean of 15 days.

 

As of today in 2008, HA injectable soft tissue fillers are the gold standard by which all
future injectable filler materials will be compared.

 

Dr Barry Eppley
http://www.eppleyplasticsurgery.com/
http://www.ologyspa.com/
Clarian North Medical Center, Carmel, Indiana
Clarian West Medical Center, Avon, Indiana
Indianapolis


Dr. Barry EppleyDr. Barry Eppley

Dr. Barry Eppley is an extensively trained plastic and cosmetic surgeon with more than 20 years of surgical experience. He is both a licensed physician and dentist as well as double board-certified in both Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. This training allows him to perform the most complex surgical procedures from cosmetic changes to the face and body to craniofacial surgery. Dr. Eppley has made extensive contributions to plastic surgery starting with the development of several advanced surgical techniques. He is a revered author, lecturer and educator in the field of plastic and cosmetic surgery.

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