06/05/2026
This is what filler is supposed to look like.
In 2023, this patient’s initial correction took 13 syringes over two appointments.
Two years later, she’s maintained the result with TWO syringes total.
Facial aging rarely happens in just one area. This patient didn’t just have smile lines. She had volume that had shifted downward over years, loss of support through the midface and jawline, heaviness in the lower face, and a lack of cohesion across the whole structure.
Treating only her nasolabial folds would have made things worse. The folds were a symptom, not the cause.
So yes, comprehensive correction upfront. Always. Different products, different depths, different goals by zone. Some areas needed structure. Some needed softness preserved. Some needed lift from the inside out.
That’s what facial balancing actually means (to us, at least.) It’s not just a treatment. It’s a plan. One that corrects, restores, contours where needed, softens where needed, and accounts for how the face will continue to change over time.
When treatment is done strategically and with longevity in mind, the maintenance is a fraction of the initial investment. She didn’t need 11 syringes again. She needed 2 over two years.
This is also why comparing your plan to someone else’s never works. Two patients can describe the exact same concern. One may need a single syringe. One may need a full structural plan. One may not need filler at all.
Here’s what separates good filler from bad filler: good filler doesn’t announce itself.
It doesn’t come up at dinner. It doesn’t show up in photos. People just think you look more rested, more lifted, more like yourself than you did a few years ago. They just can’t quite put their finger on it.
That’s the standard we hold every treatment to.
If you’ve been hesitant about a larger plan because you’re afraid of looking overdone… that fear means you’re exactly the kind of patient we opened Park for.