
Check the background of the injector - they should be a doctor, dentist or nurse prescriber - but then it's also key to ask what aesthetic training they have had and how many procedures they have actually performed. If someone can offer you treatment at £150 or under they are probably not using a high quality filler.Ĥ.

This is because we use a high quality dermal filler, which I know is safe, has been formulated and manufactured correctly, stored correctly and can be traced. Our treatments are administered by doctors or specialist nurse and the filler costs approximately half of the treatment figure. I charge around £300 for a lip enhancement treatment at my clinic which is a reasonable price. Any offers of purchasing half a syringe are very risky - who had the other half?ģ. In todays video, I did the Lip Fillers Prank to See How My Brothers Reacts. Do not share syringes of dermal filler as there is a risk of blood-borne infections. Nor do they have the facilities and the medical staff to manage your complication.Ģ. Practitioners who do not have an actual clinic but travel around the country are not there the next day if you develop a complication. Use a reputable clinic which can manage any complications if something goes wrong. Physically, Green suggests refraining from aspirin, Motrin, Aleve, fish oil, multivitamins, and vitamin E for about a week before your appointment, as each can act as a blood thinner and contribute. My advice to anyone considering lip enhancement:ġ.
#Lip filler prank kit how to#
Others have been treated by medical people who have done a one day course in how to inject dermal filler and have not had enough training or experience.

The majority of ‘botched’ cases are actually carried out by the patients themselves who have purchased the dermal filler online or had it performed cheaply either by nurses who travel around the country or by non-medical people such as hairdressers or beauticians in non-clinical environments such as tanning salons, nail bars or even at home. Sometimes it is possible for me to dissolve the dodgy filler either with laser treatment or by injecting an enzyme to break it down, but sometimes it isn't possible (it depends on what type of filler the original practitioner has used) and these patients I refer to a plastic surgeon to have the filler surgically removed.

I personally review approximately twenty ‘botched’ lip cases per year patients who come to me having been treated elsewhere when things go wrong.
