Background: Hyaluronic acid fillers are used for facial rejuvenation and are classified as non-cross-linked or cross-linked (monophasic mono- or polydensified).
Objectives: To histologically assess the intradermal durability of three types of fillers (biphasic, monophasic monodensified, and monophasic polydensified), to compare the durability of the products over 6 months, and to evaluate the structural changes after application.
Methods: In all, 25 volunteers received injections of three different fillers in the dermis of the right lumbar region (in one line), and equal amounts of the fillers were injected into three different sites (in the same column), yielding nine points of application in each patient. Each line was biopsied on days 2, 92, and 184; these skin samples were analyzed histologically, and the presence or absence of these fillers was verified by a dermatopathologist.
Results: The histological analysis showed that over 182 days, the amount of the injected monophasic polydensified, monophasic monodensified, and biphasic filler products decreased by 62.5%, 25%, and 12.5%, respectively.
Conclusions: The biphasic and monophasic monodensified fillers presented greater intradermal durability than did the monophasic polydensified filler at 6 months after intradermal injection.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/asj/sjw161 | DOI Listing |
Dermatol Ther
January 2021
Department of Dermatology, Incheon St. Mary's Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, South Korea.
Filler rhinoplasty is a popular procedure in Asia, and it is of great importance to understand the clinical efficacy and durability of the different filler products that serve this purpose. Here, we aimed to evaluate and compare the safety, efficacy, and longevity of two different hyaluronic acid (HA) fillers in improving the nasal profile in Asians. A multicenter comparative trial was performed for 48 weeks after a single injection of a popular monophasic monodensified, and a newly developed biphasic HA filler.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAesthet Surg J
May 2017
Resident of Internal Medicine, ABC Medical School, Santo Andre, SP, Brazil.
Background: Hyaluronic acid fillers are used for facial rejuvenation and are classified as non-cross-linked or cross-linked (monophasic mono- or polydensified).
Objectives: To histologically assess the intradermal durability of three types of fillers (biphasic, monophasic monodensified, and monophasic polydensified), to compare the durability of the products over 6 months, and to evaluate the structural changes after application.
Methods: In all, 25 volunteers received injections of three different fillers in the dermis of the right lumbar region (in one line), and equal amounts of the fillers were injected into three different sites (in the same column), yielding nine points of application in each patient.
Dermatol Surg
September 2016
South Beach Dermatology, Miami Beach, Florida.
Dermatol Surg
September 2016
*All the authors are affiliated with the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
Background: Cross-linked hyaluronic acids (HAs) with varying characteristics and formulations are available. Despite the popularity of HA, limited studies compared the effectiveness of monophasic monodensified hyaluronic acid (MMHA) and biphasic nonanimal stabilized hyaluronic acid (BHA) products in correcting nasolabial folds (NLFs) in the Asian population.
Objective: This double-blinded, randomized research aimed at evaluating the outcomes of MMHA and BHA products in treating Asian NLFs.
Dermatology
November 2014
Faculté de Médecine, Université de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Hyaluronic acid (HA) formulations are used for aesthetic applications. Different cross-linking technologies result in HA dermal fillers with specific characteristic visco-elastic properties.
Objective: Bio-integration of three CE-marked HA dermal fillers, a cohesive (monophasic) polydensified, a cohesive (monophasic) monodensified and a non-cohesive (biphasic) filler, was analysed with a follow-up of 114 days after injection.
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