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Dermal Fillers

How Much Are Eye Fillers

Most patients with dark circles, deep tear troughs, and wrinkles in the skin beneath the eyes are shifting to filler treatment to soften the ageing signs. However, deciding whether or not to try eye fillers and their cost is a big challenge for many patients. Worriless, the blog explain first what eye fillers are and further elaborates how much eyes fillers cost.

Having a healthy sleeping pattern, drinking enough water, and taking care of one’s skin can help eliminate dark circles, eye bags, and wrinkles around the eye trough. Also, applying natural make-up or wearing colourful glasses can help to camouflage these common eye conditions. However, eye fillers are the best option for a more adverse and prominent result. They plump skin beneath one’s eyes for 6 to 12 months, depending on the material used and the body’s metabolism. But, if one wants a safe and effective eye filler treatment, be ready to spend a fortune. 

What Are Eye Fillers?

According to Sharad & Jaishree (2020), eye fillers are non-surgical cosmetic procedures injected beneath the skin of the eyes to minimise dark circles, wrinkles, or hollows for a more youthful appearance. These fillers reduce puffiness on the skin beneath the eyes by adding volume to sunken eyes. Like most approved cosmetic treatments, eye fillers are used off the label, meaning they have been approved by Food Standard Agency (FSA) to be safe and effective. Darkness in the eye trough or sunken eyes can be genetically inherited, but in most cases,they can be caused by other issues like:

Ageing

Old age can cause low production of hyaluronic acid and skin fats essential in maintaining skin volume and elasticity. Most Eye fillers restore the lost natural hyaluronic acid to the eye tear trough. At the same time, some contain biodegradable materials such as poly-l-lactic acid that stimulate the release of collagen and hyaluronic acid release by skin glands to counteract ageing signs.

Poor Sleeping Patterns

It causes premature ageing signs to your eyes’ skin

Dehydration and using too many pigments (make-ups)

Goel et al. (2020) explained that eye fillers take less than 30 minutes to deliver an immediate result depending on the cosmetic practitioner’s experience. Afterwards, the aesthetic practitioner will lay out issues to follow to fasten the healing process of bruising and swelling and also shorten the time required for filler to settle, which include:

  • Avoid make-up application, alcohol, smoking, and vigorous ex application, alcohol, smoking, and vigorous exercises for at least a day or two.
  • Give the face a break by avoiding unnecessary touching on the treated area
  • Sleep as the head is elevated until the filler material settles. (2 to 3days)
  • Don’t fly for a week since plane air pressure reduces the skin’s natural healing process
  • Stay hydrated and avoids blood thinning medications and supplements like Vitamin E, aspirin, fish oil, etc.

How Much Does Eye Filler Cost?

Any medication’s cost depends on several issues before concluding its exact price. Eye filler treatments are not exceptional. They were a bit expensive but worth the price. According to De Maio & Maurício (2021), eye fillers’ cost typically starts from £200 per syringe and increases depending on the following factors:

  • Type of the eye filler
  • Place of injection
  • Cosmetic clinic cost

Type Of Eye Filler

The type of eye filler depends on the material injected to add volume to the eye tear trough. The materials affect the cost of eye fillers since they are manufactured differently. The commonly used eye fillers include:

Hyaluronic Acid (HA) Fillers

HA fillers are synthetic gel that adds volume to sunken eyes by mimicking the body’s natural substance. They last for a few months but are considered by most customers to provide a natural look that feels real. They cost roughly from £200 to £500 depending on other factors.

Poly-L-Lactic Acid Fillers

They are biocompatible materials that are injected through a linear threading process. They significantly promotethe production of collagen to uplift sunken eyes. Their price ranges from £350 to £600 per treatment.

Calcium Hydroxyapatite

This eye filler is made from naturally extracted calcium and phosphate from animal bones. Upon injection, it stimulatescollagen production to add volume to the eye tear trough. They are more expensive than HA fillers and cost approximately £500 to £800.

Micro-Lipoinjection

Fat transfer is another way to build up the skin around your eyes. If one hasa deep tear through, the cosmetic doctor may recommend transferring their body fat to inject it into skin muscles beneath the eyes. It is a bit more expensive than other filler treatmentsand can cost around £750 to £1000 depending on clinic cost.

Place of Injection

The amount of eye filler injected can also impact the overall cost. The amount differs depending on the eye skin part being injected.

Crow’s Feet

Eye fillers can be used to reduce lines outside the corners of your eye. The lines require a small amount of filler material to soften. Therefore, the half syringe can do the job.

Tear Trough

Rowland-Warmann et al. (2020) explained that cosmetic doctors might require 1 to 3 syringes of fillers to add volume to the eyes’ tear trough, depending on how deep they are. It is more expensive to treat deep-rooted tear troughsthan soften fine lines and wrinkles around the eyes.

Under Eye Wrinkles

Like crow’s feet, little filler material is required to soften wrinkles underneath the eyes.

Cosmetic Clinic Cost

Clinics mostly have different consultation fees, drug prices, service fees, and lab prices depending on the location, the professionality of their cosmetic doctors, and government interference. Therefore, eye filler treatments maybe cheaper in local health centres but triple the price in private city clinics.

Location

Clinics in cities like London, Manchester, Celtic, etc., tend to be more expensive in offering eye filler injections compared to local vendors.

Skills of the Cosmetic Doctor

A highly skilled cosmetic doctor provides filler treatments of good quality and minimal complications but is highly-priced.

Sponsorship

Public clinics sponsored by religion or the government tend to offer cosmetic procedures cheaply. However, private health centres might be expensive to provide the same service, but mostly they contain qualified cosmetic injectors.

Frequently Asked Questions about Eye Fillers

Are Eye Fillers Safe?

Although they can be accompanied by mild side effects like bruising and swelling, under-eye fillers are safe if performed by an experienced aesthetic practitioner. Depending on one’s body’s healing process, the side effects mostly disappear a few hours after the injections.

How Does an Eye Filler Treatment Work?

Through a precise injection of filler materials like hyaluronic acid into the skin muscles beneath the eyes, the lost volume due to age, genetics, and other factors is restored hence softening pronounced lines and wrinkles surrounding the eyes.

Conclusion

Cosmetic treatment popularity is based on its power to add volume to the skin beneath the eyes, thus treating sunken eyes and softening lines or wrinkles around the eyelid. The popularity of eye filler injections is growing daily, with millions of UK patients annually seeking treatment.However, they are a bit expensive; they cost approximately between £200 and £1000 depending on the material used, the clinic cost, and the amount injected. Nonetheless, eye filler cosmetic procedures are worth the price since they are safe and provide immediate results lasting 6 to 12 months, depending on your body’s metabolic rate.

References

de Maio, M. (2021). MD Codes™: a methodological approach to facial aesthetic treatment with injectable hyaluronic acid fillers. Aesthetic plastic surgery, 45(2), 690-709.

Goel, A., & Sethi, P. (2020). Concealing of under eye orbital fat pads with hyaluronic acid filler: a case report. Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, 19(4), 820-823.

Sharad, J. (2020). Treatment of the tear trough and infraorbital hollow with hyaluronic acid fillers using both needle and cannula. Dermatologic Therapy, 33(3), e13353.

Rowland-Warmann, M. J. (2020). Dermal Fillers: Lack of Regulation Poses a Real Threat to Patient Safety. Expert Witness Journal, 1, 61-66.

Tatyana Dyachenko
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