Botox® and Dysport are the same protein molecules, produced by differrent processes, by different companies. This protein is one of seven proteins produced by the bacterium that causes botulism, a form of poisoning. This protein is composed of the same amino acids that are used to make our body proteins. When our body breaks down this protein, the amino acids are used by our bodies. It is supplied in tiny amounts. Botulinum Toxin treats the visual signs of aging by reducing wrinkles. The procedure has even less risks than most types of cosmetic surgery or skin resurfacing. The most common areas for injections include vertical lines between the eyebrows and "crow's feet" around the eyes.
Reasons for Considering a Botox Treatment:
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Small wrinkles or “crow’s feet” around your eyes
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A vertical “frown line” between your eyebrows
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horizontal forehead wrinkles
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downturned corner of mouth
General Procedure
The procedure works by altering the facial muscles beneath the skin that are related to wrinkles. A cream with local anesthetic will be placed on your skin prior to treatment. Typically a small amount of Botox® or Dysport is injected into the muscle that causes the wrinkle. It works by blocking the impulses from the nerve to the facial muscles, thereby relaxing them. The result is that the underlying facial muscles relax, and the skin begins to smooth out over a period of months. The Botox® itself only lasts about three months, but many people can use it to help them break the habit of frowning, and this gives long-lasting results.
Recovery Process
Patients generally return to their normal activities immediately after the procedure. Patients should avoid engaging in heavy physical exercise, or rubbing the injected area for at least 24 hours.
The following informational article was published to inform other types of doctors about Botox.
Botox and DysportR
How does it achieve improved facial aesthetics? When and how can it be used for the lips, chin, and elsewhere on the face?
There are seven distinct toxins produced by Clostridium botulinum (A, B, C, D, E, F, and G). Botox and DysportR are the sterile, lyophilized crystalline form of botulinum toxin A. It is produced and supplied in frozen vials containing 100 units each. It is reconstituted when the injecting doctor adds sterile non-preserved normal saline. The protein begins to denature when it is reconstituted; it is inactivated more rapidly if it is not reconstituted exactly according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The contents of one vial is below the estimated dose for systemic toxicity for a person weighing over six kilograms. (A 150 lb. adult Is 70 kilograms.) It is almost entirely taken up by local tissues at the site of injection. The protein exotoxin of Clostridium Botulinum enters presynaptic cholinergic motor (and other) nerve endings, and it inhibits subsequent release of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.
I think that the best cosmetic application is to diminish the vertical “frown lines” that many adults develop between their eyebrows. Many people (including some doctors) have an unconscious habit of furrowing their brow during mental concentration. Unfortunately, the lines created by this habit can give the facial appearance of concern, worry, or even anger. If a person’s mood is misinterpreted pejoratively, it can interfere with optimum communication.
Several units of Botox or Dysport are injected into or slightly above each end of the corrugator supercilii muscle, resulting in a paralysis (or paresis) of this muscle. The effect peaks about three days after injection, and it lasts approximately three months. In rare cases it can last up to a year. The amount necessary is roughly proportional to the bulk of muscle being treated. During the months of paralysis, the expression lines gradually diminish.
After one or two such sessions there can be an added bonus: the patient may be able to learn to control the frowning habit. When the effects of the medication on the corrugator muscles begin to diminish, the patient will be much more aware of each frowning motion than ever before. Empowered by this awareness, many people can now “teach themselves” not to frown.
A few of the people who have vertical lines in their upper and lower lips have a habit of pursing their lips. In these select cases, a tiny amount can be injected subcutaneously in several places in each lip in order to diminish this habit. Caution is advised when using Botox or Dysport near muscles which control lip movements, as unnatural expressions can result. (Naturally, smokers would also have to quit smoking.) When I have treated such vertical lines with these medications, none of my patients have been upset, but it had weakened the lip pursing muscles enough that several people have decided not to repeat this particular application.
Small doses can also be injected in the “crowsfeet” areas, lateral (not inferior) to the orbits, to diminish the effects of the lateral orbicularis oculi. This can allow the wrinkles in this area to diminish. And it does not seem to noticeably interfere with natural expression when performed properly. But, since such wrinkling naturally occurs during smiling, the wrinkles reappear when the medication effect diminishes.
Botox or Dysport can be used on the forehead to diminish the transverse forehead wrinkles resulting from chronic frontalis muscle activation. Multiple injections are necessary, as its effect will only diffuse a little over a centimeter. Some people habitually raise their eyebrows to compensate for eyelid ptosis or excessive impingement of skin on their eyelids . Botox or Dysport would make these individuals look worse. Additional caution is necessary laterally, where there is less vertical eyebrow support. A surgical forehead lift is a better long-term solution, but this is a significant surgical procedure.
Botox or Dysport can be injected into bands of platysma muscle in the neck, but accurate dosing is required, and important subjacent musculature can be affected. In addition, individuals with such neck bands usually also have excess skin, which is best removed with a facelift.
Sometimes, a temporary improvement in appearance (or an injectable filler) is all that is desired. I have helped patients a number of times when they wanted to look better for their daughter’s wedding pictures, for example. Botox or Dysport would be administered at least two months ahead of time in this circumstance. Even when patients highly appreciate the effects of these medications, it is usually not realistic to plan treatment every three months indefinitely.
Although the following is not related to cosmesis, it is of interest that some patients who receive Botox or Dysport for frontalis or corrugator hyperfunction have a significant diminution in recurrent headaches. I have used these medications to attempt to help a number of patients with headaches which have been refractory to all other medical therapy, but it is only occasionally successful in this group of patients. Boptox or Dysport seems to be more helpful in alleviating common tension headaches. Transient headache can also be a side effect. Neurologists are more skilled at using this medication for the treatment of headaches, and it may be covered under mediacal insurance for this application.
Botox or Dysport has been used to improve a large number of muscle dystonias and spastic conditions, including abnormal mentalis muscle spasm which can occur with lip pursing (whistling or kissing) in some individuals. People with gustatory sweating (Frey syndrome) are reliably and significantly helped.
When very huge doses have been given, especially to children, spread of toxin effect has occurred. For this reason, the FDA currently requires that prospective patients be warned that spread of effect could cause generalzed muscle weakness, double vision, blurred vision, drooping eyelids, a change invoice, loss of voice, trouble pronouncing words clearly, loss of bledder control, difficulty breathing or swallowing. None of these latter problems has occurred when people have received reasonable doses of Botox or Dysport for cosmetic reasons.
After treatment, patients are encouraged to use the treated muscle (frown, etc.) for several hours, as this seems to increase local uptake. Massage is contraindicated in most situations, as it could spread the effects into muscles which are not desired to be paralyzed.
It is interesting that Botox and Dysport are actually relatively safe, and widespread use has not been associated with many problems. Because it is mixed with saline, which is slightly acidic, it is rather painful to receive the injections. Minor bruising from the 31 gauge needle is not rare, but it clears quickly. Significant allergic reactions have not been reported, although some patients seem to have diminished effects, related to antibody production, after several injections. Some individuals may have an allergic reaction to the albumin which is crystallized with the Botox, or to cow's milk protein, which is in Dysport. When it is used near the orbit, possible side effects include diplopia or ptosis. Neuromuscular conditions with weakness, such as myasthenia gravis, or the use of drugs which interfere with neuromuscular transmission (aminoglycosides), are among the contraindications to the use of Dysport or BotoxR . It is not recommended during pregnancy or lactation.
The relative safety and efficacy of this minimally invasive procedure have carved a niche for the use of very small amounts of this well known toxin for aesthetic purposes.