
-
Our Skin Booster Treatments – including Profhilo, Polynucleotides and Sculptra – work beneath the surface to hydrate, firm and improve skin quality. These injectable biostimulants stimulate your own collagen production for gradual, natural‑looking rejuvenation.
-
Sculptra - Biostimulant Filler, rather than chasing volume, Sculptra works by stimulating your skin’s own collagen production, creating results that develop subtly over time — elegant, balanced and long-lasting. This is rejuvenation without excess. Sculptra is an advanced injectable treatment that works beneath the surface of the skin to stimulate collagen production. Unlike traditional dermal fillers, which provide instant volume, Sculptra encourages your body to rebuild its own collagen framework — improving firmness, elasticity, texture and facial support over time.
-
​Polynucleotides - Polynucleotides are injectable, regenerative biostimulators derived from purified salmon or trout DNA that repair skin at a cellular level, stimulating fibroblasts to boost collagen, elastin, and hydration. Unlike dermal fillers, they target skin quality, reducing fine lines, wrinkles, dark circles, and inflammation for natural, long-term rejuvenation.
-
Jalupro Super Hydro - Jalupro is an advanced, injectable biorevitalizing skin booster designed to deeply hydrate, lift, and firm tired, saggy, or aging skin. It uses a potent formula of 80mg Hybrid Hyaluronic Acid (high and low molecular weight), 3 functional peptides, and 7 amino acids to stimulate fibroblast activity, boosting collagen and elastin production while strengthening facial retaining ligaments.
-
Profhilo - Profhilo is an advanced injectable anti-ageing treatment that increases skin hydration and improves skin firmness, resulting in healthier and smoother skin. This highly effective treatment is given by injecting a stabilised form of hyaluronic acid, which is a naturally occurring substance found in the skin. It’s effects boost hydration in the skin and also remodels the sagging skin..

-
PDO cog threads – These polydioxanone (PDO) threads have tiny barbs that latch into the tissue like small fishhooks. Once inserted, the barbs anchor to your skin, providing support and lifting sagging areas such as the cheeks or jawline. They also stimulate collagen production, which enhances skin structure and elasticity over time.
-
PDO threads (mono & screw) – PDO thread lifts use biodegradable polyester sutures inserted under the skin to gently tighten and reposition sagging tissue. Smooth PDO “mono” threads stimulate collagen to improve skin texture, while screw threads (one or two intertwined sutures) can restore volume in sunken areas. The threads dissolve over about six months but trigger fibroblasts to produce collagen, so results can last 1–2 years. It’s a minimally invasive, “lunchtime facelift” with quick recovery and minimal scarring compared to surgical options.
-
Brow/Fox‑eye thread lift – Also called a “cat or fox eye thread lift,” this variation uses threads to lift the eyebrows toward the temples for a more elongated, cat‑like appearance. An eyebrow thread lift tightens sagging or furrowed brows and opens up the eye area. Like other thread lifts, it’s nonsurgical and has a short recovery, but results are subtler and temporary (around 1–3 years)

-
Fat‑dissolving Aqualyx – Aqualyx uses a gel formulation of deoxycholic acid, a bile acid that naturally emulsifies fat. When injected into stubborn fat pockets (chin, abdomen, thighs, etc.), the acid disrupts fat cell membranes so your body can remove them. Treatments are done under local anaesthetic and multiple sessions may be needed; the dissolved fat will not return unless you gain weight.

-
IV drips/infusion therapy – Intravenous vitamin “cocktails” primarily provide rapid rehydration. Cedars‑Sinai notes that people often feel better after IV drips because they receive fluids quickly. However, bypassing the digestive system also bypasses the body’s natural filters, so it’s essential to know exactly what’s in the infusion and ensure it’s administered by a trained professional in a sterile environment. For most healthy people the nutrients in these drips can be obtained through diet or a multivitamin, and the main benefit of an IV is water and salt.
-
Vitamin B12 & D injections – Vitamin B12 injections (cyanocobalamin) treat deficiency in people who can’t absorb enough from food; they help maintain the nervous system and healthy red blood cells. The medication is injected intramuscularly or deeply under the skin, usually in a clinic, though patients may learn to self‑inject. Severe vitamin D deficiency (serum levels < 30 nmol/L) may be treated with a single intramuscular injection of 300 000 IU colecalciferol followed by high‑dose oral supplementation until levels normalise. Clinicians should check calcium levels and monitor for side effects when using high‑dose vitamin D.
-
NAD+ IV fusion therapy – Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) drips are marketed as anti‑ageing or energy‑boosting infusions, but there is no credible clinical evidence that intravenous NAD+ provides health benefits. Major medical societies recommend oral niacin (vitamin B3) rather than IV NAD+, and there are no FDA‑approved NAD+ infusions. Experts warn that injecting NAD+ bypasses protective barriers and can introduce risks such as infection, hypersensitivity and unproven pharmacokinetics. A pilot study showed that NAD+ infused at 3 µmol/min was rapidly removed from the bloodstream with no observable increase in plasma NAD+ or metabolites. Current guidelines advise avoiding IV NAD+ outside research settings.

-
Hair Filler – Dr CYJ Hair Filler is an injectable gel containing hyaluronic acid and seven biomimetic peptides designed to reactivate dormant hair follicles and strengthen existing hair. The peptides mimic natural growth factors to stimulate new hair formation, improve blood supply and reduce inflammation. This targeted delivery helps increase hair density and thickness and is a non‑surgical option for androgenetic or stress‑induced hair loss.
-
Plinest Hair uses polynucleotides—DNA fragments derived from salmon or trout—superficially injected into the scalp. Dermatologist Dr Angela Tewari explains that polynucleotides improve scalp health by increasing blood supply and delivering growth factors; they help stimulate hair follicles and may produce up to a 15 % increase in hair density over 4–6 months. Treatments are typically spaced every four to six weeks, and they suit common hair‑loss types but are not indicated for scarring alopecia or infection.
