Periorbital Rejuvenation: Techniques for a Bright, Youthful Gaze
Fine Lines and Wrinkles – “Crow’s Feet”
The eyes “speak”—through our gaze, we express emotions, convey messages, and emphasize our speech, making it a central part of daily life. However, the periorbital area is particularly sensitive—it has the thinnest skin of any part of the human body. As a result, the intense pace of modern life and the signs of aging are easily reflected in this area.
What are the most common aesthetic issues around the eyes, and how can periorbital rejuvenation achieve a bright, refreshed, youthful look?
Fine Lines and Wrinkles – “Crow’s Feet”
These can appear due to the loss of collagen and skin elasticity over time, repetitive facial movements, and lifestyle factors such as sun exposure and smoking. Crow’s feet are the wrinkles that form at the outer corners of the eyes, resembling the shape of a bird’s foot due to their radiating pattern.
Injectable botulinum toxin remains the ideal solution for treating periorbital lines and wrinkles, while it also lifts “droopy” eyebrows that give a sad look to the face. For deeper wrinkles around the eyes, a combination of botulinum toxin and injectable hyaluronic acid (fillers) may be necessary to achieve the best aesthetic result.
Dark Circles
Dark circles under the eyes (periorbital hyperpigmentation) are caused by various factors, including heredity, lack of sleep, dehydration, or sun exposure. They can become more pronounced as we age, due to thinning skin and the loss of fat beneath the eyes.
Depending on the severity, the most effective non-invasive techniques to correct them include the use of advanced hyaluronic acid technology applied with a blunt cannula and the bio nutri lift—an advanced form of mesotherapy that combines hyaluronic acid with the powerful NCTF 135HA solution.
Deep Tear Trough
The relaxation of eyelid tissues and the sagging of the cheeks can create a groove at the lower orbital margin—between the lower eyelid and cheek—commonly known as the tear trough.
Correction is achieved by injecting a special hyaluronic acid filler (tear trough filler) into the area using a cannula. Volume restoration is immediate, while the tired look caused by small fat pockets and dark circles is simultaneously improved.
“Droopy” Eyelids
The most common cause of eyelid drooping is the stretching of the tendon that connects the levator muscle to the eyelid, causing the eyelid to “cover” part of the eye and often restricting the field of vision, which can affect eyesight.
Upper blepharoplasty effectively treats sagging skin of the upper eyelids by removing excess skin and fat for both aesthetic and functional improvement. Since droopy eyelids often coexist with sagging eyebrows, an experienced plastic surgeon may also address the upper orbital area through the same incision, achieving internal brow lifting. In more severe cases, a small incision above the brow (brow lift) may be necessary for the ideal aesthetic result.
Lower Eyelid Sagging
Excess skin and fat in the lower eyelids, combined with characteristic “bags,” make the five-point composite blepharoplasty the ideal choice. This is the most advanced and comprehensive blepharoplasty technique, harmoniously reshaping the eyelids and naturally restoring all anatomical changes in the eyelid and cheek area.
But what are the five points of composite blepharoplasty?
Lifting the cheekbones (cheek lift)
Redistribution—not removal—of fat
Suspension of the relaxed orbicularis muscle to the temporal fascia
Canthopexy (supporting the outer corner) to maintain the almond shape of the eye
Minimal skin removal
Sunken Eyes
This aesthetic issue arises when aging affects the eyelids through fat atrophy, making the underlying bone structures more prominent.
In this case, surgery is absolutely contraindicated, and the most effective solution is blepharoplasty augmentation, which involves injecting your own autologous fat using stem cells (micro fat grafting) or injecting a special hyaluronic acid.
Through a personalized assessment by a plastic surgeon experienced in periorbital rejuvenation, the right invasive or non-invasive procedure—or a combination of both—will be determined to restore the expressiveness of your gaze… allowing you to “wink at time”!