Hyaluronic acid, is a natural occurring substance, that is found in virtually all of your body’s cells.
The skin has the highest concentration of HA (50%) but it is also found in cartilage, connective tissue, and the synovial fluid that lubricates the body’s joints.
HA is very soluble and may hold up to ten times its own weight in water.
The HA molecule is a good contender for volumising and moisturising the skin due to its immunological tolerance, capacity to assist in collagen repair, and excellent absorption qualities.
HA, on the other hand, has a fast turnover rate in its native state due to enzymatic and free radical destruction, with a half-life of 24 hours in vivo.
As a result, HA must be chemically treated to avoid breakdown in order to be called a cosmetic treatment. By crosslinking Hyaluronic acid polymer chains to one another, this technique turns HA from a liquid to a gel. This crosslinking alteration enables HA to fill creases and keep its shape for a longer duration.
The longer it takes for the skin to break down cross-linked Hyaluronic acid, the more linkages are formed during the crosslinking reaction. Revolax lip filler price
Depending on the mode of growth, HA dermal fillers can be divided into two categories: cohesive (monophasic) and non-cohesive (biphasic). The cohesive (monophasic) fillers are made up of a single phase of HA that can be cross-linked once (mondensification) or continually (continuous cross-linking) (polydensified). A highly cross-linked smooth gel characterizes the Cohesive monodensified filler.
Regular densities of cross-linked HA zones distinguish cohesive polydensified fillers (Revolax). This allows larger gaps to be filled with heavier components of the gel and finer pericellular tissue spaces to maintain low-density gel in a structured yet pliable shape, ensuring optimal gel spreading into surrounding tissue. Revolax lip filler price