Botox reduces sagging jowls by tightening and lifting the jaw area. This pulls back the excess sagging skin that creates jowls in the first place.
When it comes to treating jowls, injectable options like dermal fillers are ideal for restoring facial volume, while ultrasound treatments like Ultherapy are effective when it comes to stimulating the growth of new collagen supplies to directly reduce the sagging effect of jowls.
Injecting 20 to 30 units of Botox per side, right where the muscle meets the jawline and contracts, can recontour the face as the jaw gradually narrows. Expect to wait a month or more for the muscles to shrink, and know that it may take more than one treatment before you see the lifting effect.
Small doses of Botox® are injected into the lower jaw and down the side of the neck along the lateral neck muscles. As with all Botox® injections, it may take up to two weeks to see the final results. Like Botox® in other areas, the effects can be expected to last three to four months.
Thread Lifts
A thread lift is a non-surgical alternative to a facelift. They involve using specialised threads to help lift the skin on the face and reduce the appearance of jowls.
Cosmetic fillers like Restylane and Sculptra are often used for jawline contouring. Restylane Lyft – a hyaluronic acid filler – is also frequently recommended for reshaping the jawline as it is thicker than other fillers under the Restylane umbrella.
There are several options for treating sagging jowls or reducing how saggy or droopy they appear. Surgical procedures, such as neck lifts, can tighten your skin and make it look less saggy. Nonsurgical procedures, such as thermage, lasers, and peels, can change the composition of the collagen in your skin.
Yes, Botox® can address sagging skin around the jawline to a degree, by relaxing the muscles around the area and to help smooth out the skin. Sometimes called a “Nefertiti lift,” Botox® injections to soften the jowls are a great non-surgical alternative for a chin lift.
Can Botox fix jowls? To some extent, yes, Botox can treat jowl lines. However, it depends on the reason why the wrinkles have developed in the first place. If the jowl lines themselves are the issue, then careful Botox injections in specific areas of the face may be an appropriate treatment solution.
A good injector should know where to never inject.
A qualified, experienced injector should never inject the area near the orbital bone right above the pupil. If Botox is injected here, it can drift down toward the upper eyelid and cause an eyelid droop. This can last from weeks to even months.
Do not inject laterally down the nasal sidewalls. Injection points should remain in the orbicularis oculi for crow's feet injections; be careful not to massage lower injection point in case of diffusion into the zygomaticus. FIGURE 1. (a).
As we age, the skin and fat in the face begin to loosen and sag. There is a point just in front of the jowls called the mandibular ligament where the skin is fixed to the bone and sagging doesn't occur. This allows the sagging to happen just behind that point and hence the development of jowls.
Prices for jawline fillers vary greatly depending on your desired result and your face shape (plus, obviously, where you live). Dr. Hartman approximates that the average jawline filler costs around $3,000.
While the aging process can't be reversed, you can dramatically reduce jowls with the following procedures: Facelift (surgical) Neck lift (surgical) Laser resurfacing using needles to reach treatment areas (minimally-invasive procedure with five to seven days of downtime)
One of the main benefits of microneedling is that it can help stimulate collagen production, which can lead to firmer, smoother skin. This can in turn help reduce the appearance of jowls. Microneedling is usually performed in a series of treatments, spaced out over several weeks or months.
Saggy jowls, simply put, are caused by a loss of elasticity in the skin of the lower face. This is typically caused by a decrease in the body's own collagen production, which typically starts to develop in patients who are in their late 30's or early 40's, though it can develop earlier.
Possible side effects and complications include: Pain, swelling or bruising at the injection site. Headache or flu-like symptoms. Droopy eyelid or cockeyed eyebrows.
After the age of 35, it may be too late to benefit from the preventive capacity of Botox®, especially if you have a very expressive face or fair skin, are genetically predisposed, or have unhealthy lifestyle habits such as using tan beds, overexposing yourself in the sun, or smoking.
"If you do too much Botox on your forehead for many, many years, the muscles will get weaker and flatter," cautions Wexler, adding that the skin can also appear thinner and looser. Moreover, as your muscles become weaker, they can start to recruit surrounding muscles when you make facial expressions.
When people see lines forming after BOTOX wears off, they assume treatment made their wrinkles worse. Actually, your face simply returns back to its natural state. No new wrinkles or lines are ever caused by these injections.
There's a common misconception that Botox makes you look older when it wears off. On the contrary, regular Botox treatments make you look younger even after the neurotoxin wears off.
Not everyone is a good candidate for Botox. If you are in poor general health, your skin is very thick or you have existing muscle weakness in the proposed injection site, you may not be a good candidate for Botox. Patients with sensitive skin may experience an allergic reaction at the injection site.
Go to a licensed medical professional
The person administering your filler or botox injection should be a licensed doctor, registered nurse, nurse practitioner, or physician's assistant, with the latter two being supervised by doctors.
The study, from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, found that Botox injections became the most popular non-invasive cosmetic procedure in 2020, with 4.4 million procedures performed last year.