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Botox is one of the most researched aesthetic procedures in the world. In cosmetic medicine, it uses very small doses of botulinum toxin type A to reduce overactive muscle movement in targeted areas.
When treatment is well planned and performed by an experienced physician, side effects are usually mild and temporary. Most safety problems are linked to poor technique, weak patient selection, or unrealistic dosing rather than to the product concept itself.
The most common reactions are temporary redness, mild swelling, sensitivity at the injection point, a small bruise, or a short-lived headache. These effects are usually minor and settle on their own.
Patients should understand that these expected reactions are different from a true complication.
Less common issues include eyelid droop, eyebrow imbalance, asymmetry, overly frozen expression, or unwanted diffusion into a nearby muscle. These are usually technique-related and often improve as the toxin effect fades.
Severe systemic problems are exceptionally rare in aesthetic dosing and are more often discussed in high-dose medical toxin contexts rather than routine cosmetic use.
Dr. Gemici: Botox is safest when the plan is anatomical, individualized, and conservative. Natural results usually come from correct dosing, not maximum dosing.
Choose a physician who understands facial anatomy, muscle balance, and complication management. It also matters that the clinic uses original product and takes a proper medical history.
Patients should disclose pregnancy, breastfeeding, neuromuscular disease, allergies, prior unusual reactions, and current medications such as anticoagulants or certain antibiotics.
Botox should generally be avoided in pregnancy, breastfeeding, active infection at the injection site, known botulinum toxin allergy, and some neuromuscular disorders such as myasthenia gravis.
Aesthetic Botox does not create physical addiction, and stopping treatment does not make the face worse than baseline. The effect simply fades over time and muscle activity gradually returns.
Yes, when original product is used in aesthetic doses and the treatment is performed by an experienced physician with proper patient selection.
It can if dosing is excessive or the plan is poorly designed. Conservative anatomical treatment aims to preserve expression.
Contact your doctor, but do not panic. Some asymmetries settle as the result develops, and others can be reassessed after the standard review period.

Trusted & Professional
Dr. Hamza Gemici is a medical aesthetic physician based in Ataşehir, Istanbul. His practice focuses on natural anti-aging and subtle facial harmonization using botulinum toxin, dermal fillers, periocular rejuvenation and skin quality procedures. All treatments are performed with FDA-approved products under physician-guided protocols.