- Dermal fillers are a highly complex medical act
- Regulatory framework and classification of filler
- Facial anatomy and vascular risk
- Complications of fillers performed by unqualified personnel
- Legal liability and risks for the patient
- The filler as a biological tool for tissue modulation
- Information, consent and patient safety
- Specialist training and quality in filler treatments
- Modern aesthetic medicine between safety and science
Dermal fillers are a highly complex medical act
The use of dermal fillers has become a widespread and apparently simple practice, but it is a medical act of high biological and technical complexity. The injection of biocompatible materials into the dermis or subcutaneous tissue carries real risks if not performed by qualified health professionals trained in aesthetic medicine.
The infiltration of fillers, according to Italian law and international guidelines (ISAPS, EADV, SIME), is a medical act that must be performed by a qualified physician with expertise in anatomy, pharmacology and management of aesthetic emergencies.
Regulatory framework and classification of filler
Although the filler is not a drug, it is classified as an implantable medical device (EU Reg. 2017/745). This implies that its use is subject to specific knowledge regarding the chemical and physical characteristics of the injected material, the predictability of side and/or adverse effects and the anatomy of the human face.
Facial anatomy and vascular risk
The human face is a complex vascular map, rich in individual anatomical variations. Knowledge of arterial and venous topography is crucial to avoid complications such as vascular occlusion or embolism.
The main anatomical “danger zones
A doctor trained in injective aesthetics knows how to recognise areas at risk, including the angular artery, infraorbital artery, labial artery and dorsal nasal artery. He or she also knows how to choose needles or cannulas according to the depth of the plane, the density of the filler and the mobility of the area.
Complications of fillers performed by unqualified personnel
When a filler is performed by non-medical or untrained personnel, complications increase exponentially.
The most frequent include: oedema and infections due to poor asepsis, asymmetries and irregularities due to incorrect distribution, nodules and granulomas due to superficial injection, ischaemia and skin necrosis due to vascular obstruction and, in the most severe cases, sudden blindness due to retrograde injection into the ophthalmic network.
Medical management of emergencies
The experienced practitioner has not only the technical knowledge but also the ability to intervene promptly in the event of complications.
In the case of ischaemia or suspected vascular obstruction, one must be able to immediately suspend the injection, massage and warm the area, rapidly infiltrate high-dose hyaluronidase (if HA-based filler), administer corticosteroids and antibiotics, and evaluate urgent hospital treatment.
Legal liability and risks for the patient
From a legal point of view, the performance of fillers by unqualified personnel constitutes the abusive exercise of the medical profession (Art. 348 of the Criminal Code).
In the event of aesthetic or functional damage, the patient can sue for civil and criminal liability. Professional insurance covers only duly registered and trained medical practitioners; facilities employing unqualified staff risk sanctions up to and including closure of the business.
The filler as a biological tool for tissue modulation
It should be remembered that a filler is not a simple filler, but a biological instrument of tissue modulation.
Only a qualified professional is able to customise the treatment plan, integrate fillers with other methods (PRP, laser, botulinum toxin), assess the tissue's response over time, and predict any pharmacological or inflammatory interactions. The medical approach integrates anatomical, aesthetic and functional views, guaranteeing harmonious and lasting results.
Information, consent and patient safety
The patient must be correctly informed that every injection treatment carries a risk, even a minimal one.
Clear communication and detailed informed consent are an integral part of professional ethics. The task of the experienced physician is not only to perform the injection, but to educate the patient to recognise qualified practitioners and to be wary of low-cost or non-transparent treatments.
Specialist training and quality in filler treatments
Experience and specialised training are the key to safety and quality in filler treatments.
An experienced injector knows the anatomical variables, the pharmacodynamics of materials and the techniques to prevent and treat complications. Relying on unqualified personnel exposes one to often irreversible aesthetic, functional and medical risks.
Modern aesthetic medicine between safety and science
Modern aesthetic medicine is not just aesthetics, but the science of safety and biological balance.
