Tear-Trough Filler: Who Is — and Isn't — a Candidate
Why tear-trough is hard
Thin skin (~0.5 mm), superficial vessels, weak lymphatic drainage, anatomically demanding.
Good candidate
Mild-to-moderate volume loss + normal-thickness skin + non-herniated fat + no festoon. Age 30–55 typical. Expects 50–70% improvement, not perfection.
Poor candidate (alternatives recommended)
Festoon → surgical blepharoplasty. Very thin skin → midface filler + skin quality. Pigmented dark circles → laser. Visible fat herniation → midface first.
Technique
Microcannula, deep (supraperiosteal), low G-prime HA, small volume (0.2–0.5 ml/side), fractional sessions.
Complications
Tyndall (mid-blue) → reverse w/ hyaluronidase. Excess swelling, asymmetry, vascular events (rare with cannula).
Reversible
HA filler dissolvable with hyaluronidase — "safe to try" but still patient-selected.
Midface alternative
Often the real cause is midface volume loss; cheek filler can resolve tear-trough without direct injection.
Bottom line
Excellent in good candidates, problematic in poor ones. Selection is everything.
References
- Berguiga M, Galatoire O — Tear-trough deformity: management strategies
- Goodman GJ — Avoiding tear-trough complications
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