Step-By-Step Guide Of A Botox Injection

| by Dr Vincent T | August 01, 2007
Want to know what actually takes place during botox injections? This article explains the detailed process of botox administration.

Botox as a rule of thumb is packaged as 100-unit vials, which could be stored in a refrigarator (two degrees to eight degrees) for up to two years.

Prior to giving the Botox injection, your doctor would mix the Botox with sterile saline, leading to a formulation of four units Botox per 0.1 mL of saline. It's important that your doctor check the expiry date on the vial, and also that the reconstituted Botox is clear, colourless, odourless and free of sediments before you receive the injection of Botox.

Once the vial has been opened and formed, the Botox must be kept in a refrigerator (two degrees to eight degrees), and administered within four hours. Any solution that remains should be discarded carefully as medical waste and NOT used on others.

To start the Botox injection, the doctor will use a sterile syringe to draw no less than 0.5 mL of the correctly mixed toxin, and expel any remaining air bubbles in the syringe barrel. The used needle is discarded and a new needle affixed to give the Botox injection.

Your doctor shall then get you to make several face expressions including frowning, smiling and raising your eyebrows. Through these expressions the activity of the facial muscles can be determined to decide on an effective dose and the injection points.

To reduce the possibility of ptosis, your doctor need to make sure that the injected dosage that's is correct and. The Botox should not be injected closer than one cm above the central eyebrow, or close to the levator palpebrae superioris muscle.

The entire routine takes between ten and thirty minutes. The injection will start to take effect after 24 or forty-eight hours, hitting highest effect after one week. The result will persist from three to 6 months before the next course is due.

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About the Author

Dr Vincent T is a United Kingdom doctor who is worried about the unregulated state of botox administration by unqualified practitioners. To help customers make the right decision, he runs a free info online site about cosmetic botox treatment. This article is extracted from his "effective botox injections" article. » Read more articles by Dr Vincent T
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