Bio-Remodelling: Why Fill Wrinkles When You Can Do This Instead?

The news has never been better for anyone tired of looking tired.
Rather than filling in ageing wrinkles and fine lines with dermal filler injections, a new approach is gaining a lot of traction. This rejuvenation treatment actually tops up the skin’s natural stores.
You may not have heard of it yet, but bio-remodelling is in the news in Australia and worldwide. To date, more than 1.5 million patients have turned to this treatment to correct skin laxity, improve skin hydration, soften fine lines and wrinkles. Erase nasolabial folds, laugh lines, and crepey skin. The facts you need to know to figure out whether you should make it 1.5 million and 1.
Goodbye Dermal Fillers, Hello Bio-Remodelling
When the clock strikes 30-year-old, most people begin to notice a significant change in the quality of their skin. It’s the result of a reduction of hyaluronic production. Bio-remodelling combats this common problem with injections in these key areas:
- Lower face
- Mid-face/Cheeks
- Chest
- Décolletage
- Hands
Once injected into the correct layer of the skin, the ingredients used in bio-remodelling flows and spreads to the other parts of the face, without the need for additional injections. It helps tighten saggy skin and provides a natural, not overly stretched appearance. For the majority of patients, two treatments spaced four weeks apart, deliver a noticeable improvement in skin quality. Another plus is that bio-remodelling is an excellent choice for patients seeking to bundle treatments.
What is Bio-Remodelling?
Bio-remodelling is a rejuvenation process for skin that has become weak and lax. Multiple, minute injections of vitamins, minerals, and vital skin molecules are placed in treatment areas where the skin is showing signs of lost natural strength and elasticity. This isn’t your grandmother’s hyaluronic. Today, cosmetic specialists use cross-linked dermal fillers in skin rejuvenation treatments.
Cross-linking is a process that connects linear hyaluronic molecules. The explanation of linear dermal filler is a little complex. Dermal filler is a linear chain polysaccharide consisting of repeating d-glucuronic acid and N-acetyl-d-glucosamine units. Dermal filler is a biocompatible and biodegradable polymer and is naturally found within the extracellular matrix of many human tissues.” That’s a mouthful!
If the definition above hurts your head, don’t worry. All you really need to know is that cross-linking creates new, stronger structures consisting of several dermal filler filaments with a higher molecular weight. But wait – there’s more! “More cross-linking makes the HA molecules firmer in consistency, more water absorbent when injected, and longer lasting.”
Finally, unlike dermal fillers, cross-linked HA for bio-remodelling doesn’t remain in the skin for very long.
It doesn’t need to, because rather than plumping skin, it encourages the skin to produce more of its own collagen, elastin and and other essential skin components by itself.
What does all this re-modelling mean to your skin? Keep reading!