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작성자 Richie
댓글 0건 조회 27회 작성일 26-07-11 01:55

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Microtox: Glass Skin Treatment


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Microtoxsometimes called "mesotox" or "dermatox" — is a specific anti-wrinkle injection technique where small doses of diluted botulinum toxin are placed superficially in the dermis rather than deep into the muscle. The result is different from conventional muscle-relaxing injections: skin texture improves, pore size reduces, oil production decreases, and the overall takes on a smoother, more refined without significantly affecting facial expression.


This is the "glass skin" look that’s increasingly requested at aesthetic clinics — that smooth, dewy, almost poreless quality associated with K-beauty and the curated complexions of skincare-focused celebrities. Microtox is one of the more treatments for achieving it, though the result is subtle and requires regular maintenance.


This guide covers what Microtox does, who it suits, who it doesn’t, what to expect, and how it differs from conventional .



How Microtox differs from conventional anti-wrinkle treatment


Conventional anti-wrinkle injections work by relaxing facial . The botulinum toxin is placed into specific muscle groups (forehead, glabella, crow’s feet) where it interrupts the signal between nerve and muscle. The muscle relaxes, and dynamic lines (the wrinkles that appear with facial movement) soften.


Microtox uses the same active ingredient but in a fundamentally different way:


Placement. Superficial, in the dermal layer just beneath the skin surface — not in the muscle below.


Dose. Diluted so that each micro-droplet contains a very small amount of toxin. The total dose used across a face is similar to or less than conventional treatment but distributed across many more injection points.


Mechanism. The toxin affects:


Result. Improved skin texture, smaller-looking pores, reduced oiliness, less flushing, and an "polished" quality to the skin — altering facial or dynamic line patterns.


For the broader topic of how botulinum toxin can be used in different ways, see our comprehensive .



What Microtox can address


The treatment is particularly useful for:


Enlarged pores on the cheeks, nose, and forehead. By relaxing the small muscles and reducing sebum production around the follicle, pore visibility . Effect develops over 2-4 weeks.


Excessive oiliness producing shiny, greasy-looking skin throughout the day. Microtox reduces gland activity, with patients noticing significantly less midday shine.


Fine surface lines without the deep dynamic wrinkles that anti-wrinkle addresses. The fine "crepiness" of mature skin or early ageing changes responds well to superficial dermal placement.


Facial flushing and skin. The reduction in capillary reactivity can soften redness associated with or environmental triggers.


Mild acne. By reducing sebum production — the substrate that feeds the bacteria causing acne — Microtox can produce noticeable improvement in oily/acneic skin. It’s not a primary acne treatment but works well as adjunctive therapy.


Forehead expression lines for patients who don’t want full forehead muscle relaxation but want subtle softening. Particularly useful for patients with heavy brows or upper eyelids who’d be poor candidates for conventional forehead treatment.


Excessive forehead or facial sweating. The same effect that reduces also sweat gland activity in the treated area.



What Microtox can’t do


The treatment doesn’t address:


Microtox is a refinement treatment, not a transformation. Patients with substantial skin concerns typically need it as part of a broader treatment plan.



The procedure


Consultation. Assessment of your skin concerns, suitability, and goals. The treatment plan is determined based on which specific areas need .


Preparation. Skin is cleansed thoroughly. Topical anaesthetic is usually not required — the injections are superficial and minimally uncomfortable. Some practitioners use cooling devices for added comfort.


The .


effects. Tiny bumps at each injection point that settle within minutes. Minimal redness lasting 1-2 hours. Most patients return to normal activities immediately.



What to expect after treatment


Immediately: mild pinkness at injection points, tiny bumps that quickly. small bruise.


Days 1-3: no visible change yet. The toxin is gradually taking effect.


Days 3-7: initial effects begin — less oiliness, subtle skin smoothing.


Weeks 2-3: full effect . Pore visibility reduced, oiliness substantially decreased, skin texture more refined.


Weeks 3-12: stable result. The "glass skin" effect at its peak.


Months 3-4: effect begins to fade gradually. treatment to sustain the result.


The treatment can be combined with conventional injections, dermal filler, and laser treatments in the same overall plan. Microtox is typically performed as a standalone session, with other treatments sequenced appropriately.



Aftercare


These precautions reduce the small risk of the product migrating to nearby muscles, which could affect facial expression in ways the patient doesn’t want.


For the broader aftercare framework that applies across injectable treatments, see our .



How long the result lasts


The Microtox effect typically lasts:


Maintenance treatment every 3-4 months sustains the result. With consistent treatment over time, some patients find the effect lasts slightly longer as the underlying tissue adapts.



Who is a good candidate?


The ideal Microtox candidate has:


Less suitable for:



Combining with other treatments


Microtox combines well with several other treatments to produce comprehensive results:


Microtox + conventional anti-wrinkle . Most common combinationMicrotox addresses skin texture while conventional addresses dynamic lines. Done in the same session.


Microtox + dermal filler. For patients needing volume alongside skin quality . Filler treats one set of concerns, another.


+ Profhilo or polynucleotides. Layered skin quality improvementMicrotox addresses pore size and oiliness, biostimulators address dermal quality from a different angle. See our for more.


+ skin boosters. Similar layered approach for hydration and surface quality.


Microtox + laser treatment. Microtox for ongoing oil/pore management, laser for pigmentation and surface texture. Typically rather than performed simultaneously.


For the broader non-surgical rejuvenation context, see our .



Cost


Microtox at Centre for Surgery is priced per session. Full-face treatment typically costs from £350-£500 depending on the area treated and the number of injection points required.


Maintenance every 3-4 months. Over a year, total cost is typically £1,050-£1,500 for ongoing treatment.


, including 0% APR, are available across all treatment plans.



Risks and considerations


Common (mild and self-limiting):


Less common:


Rare:


A consultation with experienced injectors substantially reduces these risks through careful patient selection, conservative dosing, and precise placement technique.



Common questions


No — that’s exactly what Microtox is designed to avoid. The placement is superficial enough that facial expression is largely preserved. You’ll still be able to raise your eyebrows, smile, and produce all normal expressions. The change is in skin quality, not muscle function.


Initial changes within 3-5 days. Full effect at 2-3 weeks.


Minimally — the fine needle and superficial placement make it less than conventional anti-wrinkle treatment for most patients. Topical anaesthetic isn’t usually needed.


Yes — many patients have both done together. Conventional treatment for forehead/glabella/crow’s feet, Microtox for cheek pores and oiliness.


For oily/acne-prone skin, yes — by reducing sebum production. For substantial active acne or acne scarring, is best as adjunctive rather than treatment.


Mesotherapy involves injecting cocktails of vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and sometimes hyaluronic acid into the dermis. It addresses different (hydration, nutrient delivery, sometimes hair restoration). Microtox is specifically diluted botulinum toxin for the effects listed above. The two are different treatments that occasionally appear together in marketing material.


They address different aspects of skin . Microtox reduces pore size and oiliness. and similar biostimulators improve dermal hydration, elasticity, and collagen . Many benefit from both, sequenced appropriately.


Yes — particularly beneficial for men with oily skin, enlarged pores, or rosacea. The treatment approach is similar to that for women.


Microtox can worsen dryness in patients who already have very dry skin, since it reduces sebum . For dry-skinned patients, hydration-focused (Profhilo, polynucleotides, skin boosters) are typically more appropriate.


Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·


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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.




Marylebone

London

W1U 6RN




Mon – Sat, 9am – 6pm

Saturday consultations available


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