Utilizamos cookies y herramientas de análisis (Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager) para mejorar su experiencia. Al aceptar, consiente el uso de estas tecnologías. Puede cambiar sus preferencias en cualquier momento.

blog.fallback_notice_title
blog.fallback_notice_body
blog.key_takeaways
Filler dissolving is the controlled use of hyaluronidase to break down unwanted hyaluronic acid filler. It is most often used when a result looks overfilled, asymmetric, migrated, lumpy, or when a medically urgent reversal is needed.
In the right hands, it is not a dramatic reset button for every face. It is a targeted correction tool. Good treatment means dissolving only what should be dissolved, protecting the surrounding tissue, and deciding whether the next step is observation or carefully planned refill.
The most common non-urgent reasons are migration, palpable lumps, asymmetry, or overcorrection. Patients may also request reversal simply because the look feels too heavy or no longer matches the rest of the face.
The urgent scenario is different. If there is unusual pain, blanching, mottled discoloration, or other signs of vascular compromise after filler, hyaluronidase may need to be used immediately as part of emergency management.
Hyaluronidase is an enzyme that breaks down hyaluronic acid. Because most modern dermal fillers are based on hyaluronic acid, the product can often be reduced or dissolved quite quickly once the enzyme is injected into the correct plane.
It does not dissolve every kind of filler. Permanent fillers and some biostimulatory products follow a different correction logic, which is why identifying the original product matters before treatment begins.
Dr. Gemici: The goal is not to erase everything by habit. The goal is to remove the part that is wrong, unsafe, or aesthetically unsuitable and leave the patient with a cleaner, more controlled baseline.
Many patients notice softening within hours, with clearer change over the first 24-48 hours. Residual swelling, bruising, and the original tissue condition can make the area look unsettled for a few more days, so final judgment should stay patient.
Recovery is usually simple. Mild redness, tenderness, or swelling can happen briefly after injection. The more urgent the reason for dissolving, the more important close medical follow-up becomes.
Yes, in many cases it can. But good timing matters. If the area was dissolved for a non-urgent aesthetic correction, I usually prefer the tissue to settle first so that swelling, inflammation, and the true anatomy can be reassessed before refilling.
A refill plan should also answer why the first result failed. Sometimes the issue was product choice, sometimes the injection plane, and sometimes simply too much volume. Better design usually means less product and better anatomy, not more filler.
No. Hyaluronidase is used for hyaluronic acid fillers. Permanent fillers and some biostimulatory products require a different correction strategy.
Many patients notice change within hours, but the clearest improvement is usually judged over the first 24-48 hours.
Often yes, but it is usually better to let the tissue settle first and then plan the refill more carefully.

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.