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Everything you need to know about Botox and teeth whitening in 2023

This is dependent on the injection volume. Your required amount of units will vary according on how active your muscles are.

By Shawn MathewsPublished 3 years ago 4 min read

This is dependent on the injection volume. Your required amount of units will vary according on how active your muscles are. A single unit costs between $9 and $15. As per an expert in professional teeth whitening, approximately 10 to 20 units, costing between $90 and $300 depending on how much your practitioner charges, are required to treat the forehead. The expense of curing crow's feet is comparable.

Is Botox painful?

The short-lived discomfort has been compared to an ant bite and lasts only a few seconds.

What is the duration of Botox?

Botox face injections plus professional teeth whitening normally provide results that last three to four months, but with continued use, those results may last longer.

What possibly could go wrong with Botox?

Botox's potential negative effects are typically brief and localised to the injection site. The same is the case with professional teeth whitening. Eyelid drooping, bruises, headaches, facial discomfort, redness, swelling at the injection site, bruising, skin tightness, muscular weakness, numbness or a pins-and-needles sensation, and nausea are some of the side effects.

Rarely, the toxin's effects can also extend from the injection site, leading to more severe side effects such difficulties breathing, speaking, or swallowing due to the weakening of related muscles. This is especially true when using higher dosages of Botox, as when treating spasticity.

Is Botox used for prevention a smart idea?

Due to the widespread promotion of Botox's smoothing effects, there have been occasional accounts of young people, even teenagers, receiving ostensibly "preventative" Botox. The takeaway is that if you start early, you can prevent wrinkles from ever developing. Dr. Lyons claims that he has even heard of youngsters receiving injectables as a prise for passing their academic tests. He does, however, advise against taking fillers and Botox too soon.

It is a somewhat pricey surgery to do before any significant outward indications of ageing, according to Lyons. "The key is knowing when to board the treatment conveyer belt. Long-term evidence to support early intervention, especially in the under-18 age range, don't seem to exist, in my opinion."

Botox's non-cosmetic applications

For a variety of non-cosmetic medical issues, Botox is a frequently given medication. People who have cerebral palsy, MS, teeth grinding, incontinence, and other conditions can benefit from it.

By paralysing the sweat glands, Botox can cure hyperhidrosis, or excessive sweating. It may be applied to the face, hands, feet, and armpits, and in some circumstances, Medicare will reimburse the cost. One Botox treatment can stop excessive sweating beneath the arms for more than six months, and in some cases for over a year. In the hands and feet, it lasts for almost six months before wearing off. The drawback is that injections might be uncomfortable in the hands and feet.

Those who have bladder weakness might benefit from botox as well. By relaxing the bladder muscle after being injected with it, it improves storage capacity and lessens incontinence. The technique takes six to twelve months to complete.

Botox injections are administered around the head and neck once every 12 weeks to treat chronic migraines (those that last more than 14 days in a month).

Checklist for injectables

To do the process, select a professional who is a licenced medical doctor or is under the supervision of one.

Attend a consultation before deciding to use injectables, and request a treatment plan that details the amount of work required and the frequency of your follow-up visits.

Take into account the continuous expense of maintaining the therapies.

To give yourself enough time to consider your options, make sure to wait a few days following your initial appointment before receiving injectables.

Do they contrast or are they equivalent?

Dermal fillers and anti-wrinkle injections are two procedures that are used to reduce the appearance of wrinkles and preserve a more youthful appearance. What distinguishes the two therapies, people frequently ask us? The distinction between fillers and toxins is sometimes hazy, and they are frequently mistaken for one another and viewed as interchangeable terms. The truth is that they are extremely different, and dermal filler and anti-wrinkle injections each target distinct issues with the face.

How do you pick the finest skin care regimen?

Accent on Skin uses both its broad aesthetic experience and its medical expertise to assist you in selecting the most effective, personally tailored treatment solutions. Together, we create a comprehensive evaluation and strategy that includes:

Which areas of your face should be lifted or relaxed with dermal filler vs. anti-wrinkle injections?

Which areas of your face should you use dermal fillers or anti-wrinkle injections to restore volume to?

While also taking into account your general health, your medical history, your treatment goals, and your budget

Use anti-wrinkle injections to ease the tension in your face's muscles and reduce wrinkles.

Botulinum toxin (Botox or Dysport), popularly known as anti-wrinkle injections, is used to relax lines and soften wrinkles. At Accent on Skin, we employ the Dysport brand of botulinum toxin.

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