Fox Eye Lift
Minimally invasive aesthetic procedure performed with a combination of Botox, PDO thread and optional fractional laser, aiming to elevate the lateral eyebrow tail and lateral canthus.
Category
PDO thread lift, biostimulators, Skinbooster, Profhilo and liquid facelift combinations.
6 terms
Combination and facial-balancing treatments cover strategic, multi-modality protocols for ageing patterns, anatomical proportion issues and volume-contour imbalances that a single injectable or device cannot fully address on its own. The guiding philosophy is to treat the face as one architectural plan — upper, mid and lower face together — rather than overloading any single region. In practice this means combining botulinum toxin for mimetic control, hyaluronic acid filler for volume and contour, biostimulators (CaHA, PLLA, PCL) for deep collagen support, energy-based devices (HIFU, RF microneedling, Thermage FLX, Morpheus8) for skin tightening, lasers for surface quality and mesotherapy / PRP / PRF / skinboosters (Profhilo, NCTF) for intradermal hydration. Recognised combination techniques include the Nefertiti lift (neck-jawline botox combination), the fox-eye lift (botox + temporal filler + threads), the liquid face lift (a non-surgical lifting effect from injectables alone), jawline contouring, lip flip plus filler combinations and Profhilo-style bioremodelling protocols. At Dr. Hamza Gemici’s clinic the combination plan is drawn up after standardised photo analysis, facial mapping and a realistic goal-setting discussion, then delivered in phases that respect budget, downtime preference and social calendar. The sequence of steps, expected result-maturation windows and the maintenance schedule are shared as a written treatment plan. Glossary terms in this category describe these holistic strategies, facial-proportion concepts and balancing principles rather than isolated treatments.
Minimally invasive aesthetic procedure performed with a combination of Botox, PDO thread and optional fractional laser, aiming to elevate the lateral eyebrow tail and lateral canthus.
Jawline contour; An aesthetic technique that shapes the mandibular edge line (ramus, gonion, chin tip) with a combination of CaHA/HA filler and masseter Botox, providing lower facial proportions, sharp definition in men, and elegant taper in women.
A combined aesthetic procedure that provides full-face non-invasive rejuvenation and restores volume loss and sagging as a result of the application of multiple filler types (hyaluronic acid, calcium hydroxyapatite, poly-L-lactic acid) and botox/neuromodulators with the MD Codes system.
Inspired by the ideal facial contours of Queen Nefertiti, it is an aesthetic technique that non-invasively contours the platysma, masseter and lower face area with the combination of Botox and thin filler.
Paris Glow is a medical aesthetics term related to combined non-surgical facial rejuvenation and contouring plans. In Dr. Hamza Gemici's glossary, it is explained as a patient-education topic for understanding indications, planning, recovery, and safety before consultation.
Prejuvenation is a medical aesthetics term related to combined non-surgical facial rejuvenation and contouring plans. In Dr. Hamza Gemici's glossary, it is explained as a patient-education topic for understanding indications, planning, recovery, and safety before consultation.
A liquid face lift combines botulinum toxin, HA filler, biostimulator fillers and sometimes threads or energy-based devices to deliver a low-downtime ageing-management protocol. In early to moderate ageing — mild laxity, mid-face volume loss, jawline contour needs — it can produce very satisfying results. However, it does not replace a true surgical facelift (SMAS lift, deep plane lift) in patients with significant skin excess, prominent platysmal bands or marked cutaneous descent. In the right candidate a liquid face lift can postpone surgery by 5-10 years; in the wrong candidate it leads to dissatisfaction. Candidacy is determined at consultation, since only an anatomical assessment can produce the right decision.
The Nefertiti lift uses botulinum toxin to selectively relax the platysma and depressor muscles adjacent to the mandibular border, producing a sharper visual jawline. It takes its name from the iconic Egyptian queen famous for her crisp jawline. It is not a surgical lift; in patients with mild to moderate laxity and adequate bony support it can deliver a meaningful improvement to jawline definition and cervico-mental angle. In significant skin excess or fatty necks it is not sufficient alone and is combined with HIFU, RF microneedling or, when indicated, surgical adjuncts. Duration is around 4-6 months and the protocol must be repeated.
The fox-eye look aims to visually lift the outer canthal point and elevate the tail of the brow. Modern protocols achieve this with a combination rather than a single technique: botox to relax lateral orbicularis oculi and brow depressors, HA filler to support the temporal region and additional filler or PDO / PLLA threads to elevate the brow tail. Patients seeking a more permanent and aggressive result may discuss surgical canthopexy. Injectable-only protocols last 6-12 months; thread components can extend the effect to 12-18 months. Correct candidate selection depends on orbital anatomy, brow shape and eye morphology — an in-person assessment is essential.
Age alone does not dictate the protocol; skin quality, bony support, volume loss and functional mimetic activity matter more. As a general framework: in the 25-35 age band, preventive combinations (micro-botox, skinboosters, light HA, lasers) tend to lead. In 35-45 we frequently plan HA filler plus biostimulators plus botox for mid-face support. In 45-55 the typical picture is energy-based tightening (HIFU, RF microneedling, Morpheus8) combined with filler and botox. In patients over 55 surgical adjuncts may be discussed. This framework is a general map only; individual plans are drawn up at consultation. At Dr. Hamza Gemici’s clinic protocols are built phase-by-phase around anatomy rather than around age.
The price of a combination treatment is not necessarily the mathematical sum of its individual procedures, because planning, physician time, product quantities and session structure change in a combined protocol. Most clinics build combination protocols as packages, and optimisation of product and dose can make the combined plan more efficient than individually billed items — but this is clinical optimisation, not a marketing campaign. The price range is personalised based on the number of planned products, total millilitres, the number of energy-based sessions and the follow-up schedule. At our clinic the full plan and price range are shared in writing after consultation. "All-face flat-rate" campaign offers should be treated with caution.