01What Sculptra actually is — and what it isn't
Sculptra is poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) — a synthetic, biocompatible polymer that's been used in medical sutures and orthopaedic implants since the 1960s. As an injectable, it's delivered in microparticle form suspended in sterile water and lidocaine.
The microparticles deposit in the deep dermis and subcutaneous tissue and slowly stimulate the patient's own fibroblasts to produce new type-I collagen over the following 3-6 months.
What Sculptra is not: a filler. A filler is a substance that occupies space immediately to create volume.
Sculptra creates almost no immediate volume — the diluent water absorbs within 72 hours. What persists is the PLLA microparticle scaffolding, which then gets replaced by the patient's own collagen.
The visible result is your own tissue in the treated zone, not the Sculptra material.
This distinction matters because patient expectations break here. A patient who books Sculptra expecting the immediate volume-restoration she gets from HA filler will be disappointed at week 4.
A patient who understands she's investing in a 6-month collagen-rebuild project will be delighted at month 6. The treatment is the same; the satisfaction depends on the framing.
Why we use the free consult specifically for this conversation: half of patients who book Sculptra do so based on celebrity-press coverage that uses the word 'filler' interchangeably with biostimulator. We need to disentangle that before any injection happens.
Some patients leave the consult and pick HA filler instead — that's the correct outcome if their priority is immediate volume.
02Who's a good candidate — and who shouldn't pursue it
The composite good candidate: 45-60, diffuse mid-face volume loss (temples flattened, cheekbone projection softened, mid-cheek hollowing), good general skin quality, willing to wait 6 months for the full result, comfortable with 2-3 sessions over 12 weeks. Patient has done their reading and understands collagen stimulation vs. immediate volume.
Strong contraindications: active autoimmune flare (lupus SLE, RA in flare, scleroderma) — Sculptra requires a normal fibroblast response, which an active autoimmune attack on connective tissue can disrupt. Recent chemotherapy (within 6 months) and current systemic steroids fall in the same category.
We will decline Sculptra in these cases and refer to alternative treatments.
Relative contraindications (we'll discuss but typically still proceed): history of keloid scarring (rare with Sculptra given the deep-injection placement, but documented), active acne or skin infection at the planned injection sites (wait until resolved), severe needle phobia (Sculptra uses a 26-gauge cannula, which is gentler than a needle but still a procedure).
Wrong-tool-for-the-job declines: severe sagging that's primarily gravitational rather than volume-related (need surgical lift), focal volume loss in just one area like a single nasolabial fold (HA filler is more efficient), patients in their 30s with no genuine volume loss (the treatment won't show a result on already-full tissue).
Why we'd rather decline at the consult than start a series that won't work: a 3-session Sculptra protocol is ฿75,000+. Starting a patient who's contraindicated or wrong-fit means either no visible result and an unhappy patient at month 6, or a result that comes from the lidocaine diluent only and fades within 8 weeks.
Neither is acceptable. The free consult exists to filter these decisions before the first injection.
03The month-by-month timeline — what your photos will actually show
Month 1 (week 1-4 after Session 1): diluent water absorbs within 72 hours. Whatever you photograph at week 1 vs week 4 will look almost identical to your pre-session baseline.
The PLLA microparticles are in place but no significant collagen rebuild has happened yet. This is the discouraging phase.
Patients who panic and book additional sessions here often regret it at month 6.
Month 2-3: subtle changes start appearing. The temples — typically the first zone to show — fill back slightly.
Mid-cheek projection returns. The transition is gradual enough that you might notice it more in side-profile mirror selfies than in front-facing photos.
Friends and family rarely comment yet.
Month 4-5: meaningful collagen accumulation. The visible volume is roughly 60-70% of where it will peak.
We schedule Session 2 (and Session 3 if needed) during this window — typically 6 weeks after Session 1, then 6 weeks after that. The treatment series compounds: each session builds on the collagen rebuild already underway.
Month 6: peak result. The lifted, restored mid-face contour is what you'll photograph and forward to friends.
The change vs. your pre-session baseline is now obvious — friends and colleagues comment on you looking 'rested' or 'lighter' without being able to identify what changed. This is the moment most patients sign up for the next maintenance series.
Year 2-3: gradual softening. Sculptra results don't disappear suddenly — they fade as the body's natural collagen turnover catches up.
Most patients book the next series at month 18-24, before the visible result has degraded significantly. The next series is shorter (typically 2 sessions instead of 3) because the substrate is better than it was before the first series.
04Why the free consult is gated and what to expect at the 30-minute visit
The consult is 30 minutes one-on-one with a board-certified physician, not a 5-minute screening with a coordinator. Bring a clear photograph of yourself from 5-10 years ago (helps us calibrate the volume-restoration target), a list of any current medications including hormonal contraception, and any photographs of celebrity or social-media results that you'd want to discuss as references.
What we'll do during the consult: photo assessment from 5 standard angles, facial mapping with a marker to identify likely treatment zones, candidacy review (autoimmune history, current medications, prior aesthetic treatments), and a frank discussion of whether Sculptra is the right answer or whether you'd be better served by HA filler, biostimulator alternatives, or surgical referral.
What we won't do: high-pressure selling. The consult is information-only — you'll leave with a treatment plan recommendation and an itemised quote, and the decision to proceed is yours.
We deliberately don't offer 'consult day discounts' because that's the kind of pressure tactic that erodes the trust this consultation is built on.
What patients should expect to ask: how many sessions, what's the realistic cost for the full series, what does each session cost individually (in case you spread payment), what are the alternatives, what happens if I don't see results at month 6, what does maintenance look like long-term. We'll answer all of these directly with numbers, not euphemisms.
05Sculptra at 45+ vs surgical lift — when to choose which
Sculptra works best in the 35-65 age window where the patient has moderate volume loss and decent skin elasticity. Below 35, there's usually nothing meaningful for Sculptra to restore.
Above 65, the skin elasticity required to display the rebuilt collagen as visible contour starts dropping, and surgical lift becomes the more efficient intervention.
Signs surgical lift would be the better choice: substantial lower-face sagging that's clearly gravitational (jowls hanging below the jaw line), neck banding from platysma muscle laxity (this is a surgical-only correction), eyelid hooding that interferes with vision, or patient priority is 'permanent solution' rather than 2-3 year cycles.
Combining is also a thing: Sculptra plus thread lift is a common protocol for patients 50-60 who want some immediate lift (threads) plus long-term collagen restoration (Sculptra). The order matters — threads first to establish the structural lift, Sculptra 4-6 weeks later to densify the skin layer the threads are anchored in.
We don't recommend this combination on a first visit; usually it's Sculptra alone first, then threads added at the year-1 review if needed.
The 2-3 year horizon and what comes after: most Sculptra patients return for a maintenance series at year 2. The second series is typically 2 sessions rather than 3 (the substrate is better).
The patients who eventually move to surgical lift do so in their early 60s, having had 2-3 Sculptra series across their late 40s and 50s. The series buys time and pushes back the surgical-decision moment — not indefinitely, but meaningfully.
의사와 바로 상담해 보세요
LINE로 사진을 보내거나 고민을 알려주세요 — 방문 전에 치료 계획과 가격대를 안내드립니다.