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Lip Augmentation
(Photos Courtesy of
The
American Society Aesthetic
Plastic Surgeons)



Lip augmentation creates fuller, plumper lips and
reduces fine wrinkles around the mouth. Lips may be injected with
collagen or with fat transferred from another site in the patient’s
body. Both liquid collagen and fat are absorbed and repeat treatments
are necessary to maintain results. Newer, longer-lasting options
include implantable materials like AlloDerm and SoftForm.
A natural or synthetic biocompatible material, or
the patient’s own fat, is injected or implanted in the lips. One
injection is usually sufficient to produce the desired result, which
may be temporary, depending on the material used. Injections may need
to be repeated periodically. Proper placement of the injected material
is important. AlloDerm, a natural collagen sheet made from donated
skin, is inserted through tiny incisions inside the corners of the
mouth. Once the AlloDerm implant is in place, it eventually becomes
integrated with the natural tissues. Gore-Tex, SoftForm and soft ePTFE
are other synthetic implant options.
- Autologen—injectable dermal
implant material made from the patient’s own skin.
- Dermalogen—injectable Human
Tissue Matrix (HTM) procured from donor tissue.
- Fascia—injectable donor tissue
made from the dense white connective tissue that supports body
structure. Can also be done as a surgical implant.
- HylaForm—injectable donor tissue
made up of a molecular component of the human body.
- Restylane—crystal-clear
injectable gel; the hyaluronic acid in Restylane is very close to
that naturally found in the body.
Another augmentation choice is laser lip
rejuvenation, which tightens the natural collagen and elastic tissue
beneath the lips.
- Immediate return to normal
activities (one-day return if sedated) for nonsurgical procedures;
depending on the procedure and materials used, recovery period is
within a week for surgical procedures.
- AlloDerm and Dermalogen do not
require patients to provide donor tissue and are not rejected by the
body, because they are human tissue. Usually they have a pliable,
natural feel.
- Gore-Tex implants are permanent,
easily inserted and well tolerated by the body.
- Temporary procedures like
collagen or fat injection can be appealing to patients who want to
experiment with a fuller-lipped look, but not necessarily commit to
it.
- Allergic reactions can range from prolonged
redness, swelling or itching, to firmness at the injection site.
Other possible complications include bleeding, lip asymmetry, and
migration and extrusion of the implant. Normal swelling and bruising
lasts from three days to a week.
- Patients with a reaction to the pre-treatment
collagen skin test; who have a serious allergy history; or are
allergic to lidocaine (a local anesthetic) should not consider lip
augmentation. Treatment is sometimes postponed for patients with
active inflammatory skin conditions or with infections.
- Collagen injections have a short-lived effect
(9-12 weeks); fat injections provide longer-lasting results, but are
sometimes unpredictable as to the degree of improvement, can have
lumping or scarring effects, and must be harvested from another part
of the body.
- Soft-form is a foreign body and may become
infected or be rejected. While many techniques exist for lip
augmentation, none are ideal.
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