Imetu citata apie tai ka snekejau, is uzsienio tinklapiu, nes Lt dar mazai apie botoxa rasoma
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Drooping - Drooping eyelids or eyebrows are two of the most common Botox complaints. In most cases, post-Botox drooping is not true eyelid ptosis (discussed below) but rather the result of improper Botox application (usually injecting the Botox too low, too deep, or too much).
This is what causes the apparent drooping: When Botox is injected into your forehead, it freezes the frontalis muscle that is used to lift your eyebrows. When this muscle is relaxed, it can make your forehead feel heavy, especially if you have a habit (conscious or not) of lifting up your brows. When your forehead is relaxed and thus heavier, your brows might drop and feel lower as a result. And since your brows are right above your eyelid and your eyes don't have anywhere to go, when your brows descend, your eyelids can end up feeling lower and looking droopy. This is more pronounced if you have hooded eyelids, if you have excess skin above the eyes, or if you have a habit of raising your brows to try to open up your eyes. So in essence, it's not that your eyelid is really drooping. It just looks like it has drooped because it's been pushed down.
True eyelid ptosis - Many people who experience post-Botox drooping have the kind of apparent drooping discussed above. True eyelid ptosis (eyelid drooping) is rare, but unfortunately, it does happen and is usually a novice Botox injector's mistake.
Eyelid ptosis occurs when the muscles that control your eyelid (levator palpebrae superiorus and levator aponeurosis) are Botoxed. Botox can either be mistakenly injected into these muscles or the Botox can spread to these muscles after being injected somewhere else. Since Botox freezes muscle contraction, having the muscles that control your eyelid be frozen means that your eyelid will droop or close"
o galima saltini? noriu suzinoti ar cia visam laikui, ar laikinai kol botulinas veikia