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LISBON – The tower technique is a novel method of injecting hyaluronic acid fillers that is particularly well suited for anatomic locations where underlying structural support for soft tissue has been lost because of aging.
The tower technique creates a deep base of scaffolding that extends through the entire subcutis. It reintroduces lost structural support for the overlying facial soft tissue rather than simply filling lines, Dr. C. William Hanke explained in a plenary lecture at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.
"The Big Three with facial aging are skin quality, facial volume, and laxity. Volume trumps the other two. ... You can improve skin quality and laxity with volume alone," said Dr. Hanke of the Laser and Skin Surgery Center of Indiana, Carmel.
Areas particularly amenable to the tower technique include the nasolabial folds, marionette lines, the brow region, the chin compartment, and the prejowl sulcus. The best areas in which to employ the tower technique have underlying bony structural support, a thick subcutis, or an overlying thick dermis.
The technique is easily mastered, he said. "You take your syringe of hyaluronic acid and point it straight down at the bone, perpendicular, and then you inject as you withdraw. You deposit decreasing amounts of the filler as you withdraw the needle, creating a pyramid-like tower," he explained. "This is really an amazing thing in that it props up the skin right before your eyes. It’s minimally painful, there are a minimum number of injections, and the complications – such as bruising – are very minimal as well."
Dr. Hanke generally utilizes 30-gauge half-inch needles for the injections. For a nasolabial fold or superior marionette line he creates two or three towers, injecting 0.1-0.2 mL of filler into each. Inferior marionette lines get one or two towers, with 0.1-0.3 mL of product placed in each. The lateral brow lift entails two or three towers, each with 0.1 mL of filler.
Restoring support of the mental area requires one to three towers, each constructed of 0.2-0.3 mL of filler placed from the periosteum to the deep dermis. The prejowl sulcus can be shored up with one or two towers, each containing 0.2-0.3 mL of filler.
The tower technique is for use with hyaluronic acid fillers. It’s not appropriate for poly-L-lactic acid or calcium hydroxyapatite fillers, which need to be placed deeper or in a single plane.
Dr. Hanke noted that he didn’t come up with the tower technique.
"I first heard about it in Germany. I think other people were using it, too. I’ve [also] heard about this technique from the Canadians. They call it the tent pole technique," he said.
Dr. Hanke and his colleagues recently wrote a detailed how-to guide to the tower technique (J. Drugs Dermatol. 2011;10:1277-80).
He reported having no relevant financial interests.
LISBON – The tower technique is a novel method of injecting hyaluronic acid fillers that is particularly well suited for anatomic locations where underlying structural support for soft tissue has been lost because of aging.
The tower technique creates a deep base of scaffolding that extends through the entire subcutis. It reintroduces lost structural support for the overlying facial soft tissue rather than simply filling lines, Dr. C. William Hanke explained in a plenary lecture at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.
"The Big Three with facial aging are skin quality, facial volume, and laxity. Volume trumps the other two. ... You can improve skin quality and laxity with volume alone," said Dr. Hanke of the Laser and Skin Surgery Center of Indiana, Carmel.
Areas particularly amenable to the tower technique include the nasolabial folds, marionette lines, the brow region, the chin compartment, and the prejowl sulcus. The best areas in which to employ the tower technique have underlying bony structural support, a thick subcutis, or an overlying thick dermis.
The technique is easily mastered, he said. "You take your syringe of hyaluronic acid and point it straight down at the bone, perpendicular, and then you inject as you withdraw. You deposit decreasing amounts of the filler as you withdraw the needle, creating a pyramid-like tower," he explained. "This is really an amazing thing in that it props up the skin right before your eyes. It’s minimally painful, there are a minimum number of injections, and the complications – such as bruising – are very minimal as well."
Dr. Hanke generally utilizes 30-gauge half-inch needles for the injections. For a nasolabial fold or superior marionette line he creates two or three towers, injecting 0.1-0.2 mL of filler into each. Inferior marionette lines get one or two towers, with 0.1-0.3 mL of product placed in each. The lateral brow lift entails two or three towers, each with 0.1 mL of filler.
Restoring support of the mental area requires one to three towers, each constructed of 0.2-0.3 mL of filler placed from the periosteum to the deep dermis. The prejowl sulcus can be shored up with one or two towers, each containing 0.2-0.3 mL of filler.
The tower technique is for use with hyaluronic acid fillers. It’s not appropriate for poly-L-lactic acid or calcium hydroxyapatite fillers, which need to be placed deeper or in a single plane.
Dr. Hanke noted that he didn’t come up with the tower technique.
"I first heard about it in Germany. I think other people were using it, too. I’ve [also] heard about this technique from the Canadians. They call it the tent pole technique," he said.
Dr. Hanke and his colleagues recently wrote a detailed how-to guide to the tower technique (J. Drugs Dermatol. 2011;10:1277-80).
He reported having no relevant financial interests.
LISBON – The tower technique is a novel method of injecting hyaluronic acid fillers that is particularly well suited for anatomic locations where underlying structural support for soft tissue has been lost because of aging.
The tower technique creates a deep base of scaffolding that extends through the entire subcutis. It reintroduces lost structural support for the overlying facial soft tissue rather than simply filling lines, Dr. C. William Hanke explained in a plenary lecture at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.
"The Big Three with facial aging are skin quality, facial volume, and laxity. Volume trumps the other two. ... You can improve skin quality and laxity with volume alone," said Dr. Hanke of the Laser and Skin Surgery Center of Indiana, Carmel.
Areas particularly amenable to the tower technique include the nasolabial folds, marionette lines, the brow region, the chin compartment, and the prejowl sulcus. The best areas in which to employ the tower technique have underlying bony structural support, a thick subcutis, or an overlying thick dermis.
The technique is easily mastered, he said. "You take your syringe of hyaluronic acid and point it straight down at the bone, perpendicular, and then you inject as you withdraw. You deposit decreasing amounts of the filler as you withdraw the needle, creating a pyramid-like tower," he explained. "This is really an amazing thing in that it props up the skin right before your eyes. It’s minimally painful, there are a minimum number of injections, and the complications – such as bruising – are very minimal as well."
Dr. Hanke generally utilizes 30-gauge half-inch needles for the injections. For a nasolabial fold or superior marionette line he creates two or three towers, injecting 0.1-0.2 mL of filler into each. Inferior marionette lines get one or two towers, with 0.1-0.3 mL of product placed in each. The lateral brow lift entails two or three towers, each with 0.1 mL of filler.
Restoring support of the mental area requires one to three towers, each constructed of 0.2-0.3 mL of filler placed from the periosteum to the deep dermis. The prejowl sulcus can be shored up with one or two towers, each containing 0.2-0.3 mL of filler.
The tower technique is for use with hyaluronic acid fillers. It’s not appropriate for poly-L-lactic acid or calcium hydroxyapatite fillers, which need to be placed deeper or in a single plane.
Dr. Hanke noted that he didn’t come up with the tower technique.
"I first heard about it in Germany. I think other people were using it, too. I’ve [also] heard about this technique from the Canadians. They call it the tent pole technique," he said.
Dr. Hanke and his colleagues recently wrote a detailed how-to guide to the tower technique (J. Drugs Dermatol. 2011;10:1277-80).
He reported having no relevant financial interests.
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY AND VENEREOLOGY