Large-particle calcium hydroxylapatite injection for correction of facial wrinkles and depressions - 28/07/11
Abstract |
Background |
Small-particle calcium hydroxylapatite (Radiesse, Merz, Frankfurt, Germany) is safe and effective for facial wrinkle reduction, and has medium-term persistence for this indication. There is patient demand for similar fillers that may be longer lasting.
Objective |
We sought to assess the safety and persistence of effect in vivo associated with use of large-particle calcium hydroxylapatite (Coaptite, Merz) for facial augmentation and wrinkle reduction.
Methods |
This was a case series of 3 patients injected with large-particle calcium hydroxylapatite.
Results |
Large-particle calcium hydroxylapatite appears to be effective and well tolerated for correction of facial depressions, including upper mid-cheek atrophy, nasolabial creases, and HIV-associated lipoatrophy. Adverse events included erythema and edema, and transient visibility of the injection sites. Treated patients, all of whom had received small-particle calcium hydroxylapatite correction before, noted improved persistence at 6 and 15 months with the large-particle injections as compared with prior small-particle injections.
Limitations |
This is a small case series, and there was no direct control to compare the persistence of small-particle versus large-particle correction.
Conclusions |
For facial wrinkle correction, large-particle calcium hydroxylapatite has a safety profile comparable with that of small-particle calcium hydroxylapatite. The large-particle variant may have longer persistence that may be useful in selected clinical circumstances.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : calcium hydroxylapatite, cheek augmentation, Coaptite, facial augmentation, fillers, HIV lipoatrophy, soft-tissue augmentation, wrinkle reduction
Plan
Supported by Department of Dermatology, Northwestern University. |
|
Conflicts of interest: None declared. |
Vol 65 - N° 1
P. 92-96 - juillet 2011 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?