대덕테크

메뉴 닫기

CHEONGSONG CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIP

언론보도

청송 크로스컨트리 챔피언쉽

언론보도

how-to-get-rid-of-marionette-lines

페이지 정보

profile_image
작성자 Raymundo
댓글 0건 조회 6회 작성일 26-07-07 13:33

본문

How to Get Rid of Marionette Lines


Posted on [post_date] [post_comments] [post_edit]





How-to-Get-Rid-of-Marionette-Lines.png?format=webp&nv=4b2eb644-23b2-43ac-90c9-42b68f575870



Marionette lines are the vertical creases that run downward from the corners of the mouth toward the jawline. They’re named after the lines on a puppet’s mouth — and they’re one of the most commonly cited reasons patients say their face looks "sad" or "tired" even when they’re not.


What’s clinically important: marionette lines are primarily a volume problem, not a wrinkle problem. The line itself is real, but the cause sits above and around it — in the descended cheek tissue, the loss of jawline structure, and the downturned corner of the mouth that gravity and age produce together.


This guide explains the anatomy, what drives the change, and the realistic options at each stage — from filler through to when descent is significant.



The anatomy


Several factors contribute to marionette line formation:


Descended mid-face tissue. As the cheek OnabotulinumtoxinAAbobotulinumtoxinAIncobotulinumtoxinAPrabotulinumtoxinALetibotulinumtoxinARimabotulinumtoxinBHyaluronic Acid FillersCalcium Hydroxylapatite FillersPoly-L-lactic Acid FillersPolymethylmethacrylate FillersAutologous Fat GraftingForehead Lines TreatmentGlabellar Frown Lines TreatmentCrow's Feet TreatmentBunny Lines TreatmentChemical Brow LiftLip FlipGummy Smile CorrectionMasseter ReductionJaw SlimmingDimpled Chin SmoothingCobblestone Chin SmoothingNefertiti Neck LiftMicro-BotoxMesotoxHyperhidrosis TreatmentChronic Migraine ReliefBruxism TreatmentTMJ TreatmentCervical Dystonia TreatmentNeck Spasm TreatmentBlepharospasm TreatmentLip AugmentationLip ContouringCheekbone EnhancementTear Trough FillersNasolabial Fold SofteningMarionette Line FillersLiquid RhinoplastyNon-Surgical Nose JobJawline ContouringJawline DefinitionChin AugmentationTemple VolumisingHand RejuvenationAcne Scar Subcision Filling compartments thin and descend with age, weight accumulates above the jawline. This descended tissue forms what we call jowls. The line where descended cheek tissue meets the relatively immobile chin and lower lip area is the marionette line.


Loss of the depressor anguli oris . The depressor anguli oris (DAO) is a small muscle that runs from the side of the chin upward to the corner of the mouth. Its job is to pull the corner of the mouth down — when it contracts more strongly than the muscles lifting the mouth corner, the result is a permanently downturned mouth.


Loss of bone support. The mandible (jawbone) actually changes shape with age — it becomes narrower and less projected. The skin and soft tissue that previously sat on a fuller bony framework now sit on a smaller one, contributing to descent.


Skin laxity. The skin itself loses elasticity, can no longer recoil over the changing structure, and develops static creases along the natural lines of tension.


The implication: treating just the line itself, in isolation, often doesn’t produce the result patients want. The cause of the line involves several different structures, and the treatment that works best addresses the structural context rather than just masking the surface appearance.


For broader context on how facial ageing progresses, see our guide on .



What makes marionette lines worse


Volume loss is the primary driver. Mid-face fat compartment thinning starts in the mid-30s and progresses over decades. Patients who lose weight rapidly often notice marionette lines becoming more obvious the volume loss is concentrated.


Sun exposure degrades dermal collagen and elastin, reducing the skin’s to bounce back over the changing underlying structure.


Smoking compounds the problem in multiple ways: direct collagen damage, vascular impairment, and the repetitive lip-pursing action of smoking adding mechanical wear.


Genetics set how prominent the lines become and how early. Some patients see lines in their early 40s; others develop them only in their 60s.


Repetitive facial expressionsparticularly chronic downturning of the mouth (frowning, sadness, concentration) — etch the lines deeper over time.


Sleep position. Consistent side-sleeping contributes to asymmetric marionette line development on the side that presses into the pillow.



Treatment options — by stage


Skincare doesn’t reverse established marionette lines but slows their and supports any other treatment you have:


Daily broad-spectrum SPF is the highest-impact single intervention.


Topical retinoids build dermal collagen and skin quality over time.


Vitamin C provides antioxidant protection.


Stopping smoking matters substantially if you’re a current smoker.


stable weight prevents the rapid volume changes that exaggerate marionette lines.


For most patients, is the most effective non-surgical treatment. As with nasolabial folds, the most natural-looking results come from a structural approach rather than just filling the line itself.


Cheek and jawline restoration first. Restoring volume to the mid-face and supporting the jawline structurally lifts the descended tissue that’s contributing to the marionette line. placed in the lateral and zygomatic cheek areas creates the architectural support that’s been lost.


Mouth corner support. A small amount of filler placed at the corner of the mouth lifts the corner and reduces the "sad" appearance.


Direct line filling — as a secondary step. After the structural work, any residual visible marionette line can be addressed with a small amount of filler placed within the line itself. Often, addressing the cheek and mouth corner first reduces how much direct line filling is needed.


Why the approach is preferred. Filling marionette lines without addressing the descended tissue above them can produce a heavy, sausage-like appearance below the mouth — the line is filled but the face still looks aged. Restoring the structural context produces a far more natural-looking result.


Filler longevity in this area is typically 9 to 18 months, depending on the product and patient. The treatment is reversible with if needed.


The combined is the same one used for — the principle being that the lower face works as an integrated unit, and it that way produces the most natural results.


have a small but useful role for marionette lines. A small dose into the depressor anguli oris (the muscle pulling the mouth corner down) reduces its activity. With the DAO weakened, the mouth corner returns to a more neutral or slightly lifted position, which improves the appearance of the line .


This is a technically demanding injection — the dose must be small and the location precise. Too much, and the lower lip function is affected; the wrong placement, and the smile becomes asymmetric. The technique should only be performed by experienced injectors with this specific anatomical area.


AWI for the DAO is usually combined with filler treatment rather than used alone.


For patients whose skin quality is also a concern, energy-based treatments stimulate collagen and improve overall texture:


radiofrequency microneedling reaches deep into the dermis. Particularly useful for the lower face where skin laxity is starting to appear.


combines four laser modes including an intra-oral pass that delivers heat to the deeper tissues from inside the mouth. Useful for the lower face and jawline.


These don’t replace filler or surgery for marionette lines but improve the overall context — better skin quality and modest tightening complement the structural work.


and treatments improve dermal quality from within. Useful as preparation before filler work in patients with poor skin quality, or as maintenance between filler .


For patients with significant tissue descentvisible jowling, sagging along the jawline, advanced mid-face flatteningsurgical treatment is more effective than continuing non-surgical maintenance.


repositions the descended SMAS (the deeper structural layer of the face) and overlying tissue. The repositioning lifts the descended cheek tissue off the jawline, restores jaw definition, and dramatically reduces marionette line . The result is long-lastingtypically 7 to 12 years before recurrence.


focuses on the lower cheek and jawline. Useful for patients with moderate and softening of the marionette area but not yet enough descent to warrant a full facelift.


is often combined with facelift because the neck and lower face age together. Treating one without the other can leave a visible mismatch.


— the patient’s own fat is harvested from another body area, processed, and injected into the mid-face and mouth corner area. Unlike HA filler, the result is permanent for the fraction that survives transfer (typically 50-70%). Often combined with facelift for a more complete result.


A consultation with our specialist team — includingestablishes which approach matches your anatomy.



How to decide which treatment fits


Mild marionette lines, minimal descent: filler with cheek and mouth corner support. Add daily SPF and good .


Moderate lines with early jowling: filler with AWI to the DAO, plus energy-based skin treatment. Sometimes this is enough; sometimes it’s the stage at which patients start thinking about .


Established lines with visible jowling and mid-face descent: surgical consultation becomes appropriate. Continued non-surgical work at this stage produces diminishing returns and increasingly heavy appearance from accumulated filler. The honest answer is that a facelift produces what filler can’t.


Significant lower-face and neck descent: facelift with neck lift, often combined with fat transfer.


For most patients in their 40s and 50s, combination treatment over time produces the best result — moving through the stages as the underlying anatomy changes.



Cost


Filler treatment is priced per syringe. Most patients need 1 to 2 syringes for cheek/mouth corner work plus a smaller amount for the line itself if required after that. Surgical options vary substantially. , including 0% APR, are available.



What we don’t recommend


PDO thread lifts. The Centre for Surgery does not offer thread lifts. The evidence for sustained benefit is weak, the complication rate (visible threads, palpable threads, thread extrusion, infection) is higher than alternatives, and the cost is to filler treatment that has more reliable outcomes. Patients seeking a non-surgical lift typically get better, more consistent results from comprehensive filler treatment.


Filling marionette lines without the cheek. For the reasons discussed above, isolated line treatment often an unnatural-looking result. Comprehensive treatment is more expensive in the short term but produces a more natural appearance and tends to last longer.


Continued filler treatment when surgery is the right answer. Patients who have advanced to the point where surgical lifting would address their concerns more effectively sometimes continue layering filler year after year, with diminishing returns and a progressively unnatural appearance. An honest consultation should identify this point and recommend surgery when appropriate.



Common questions


The combination of descended mouth corners and visible marionette lines produces a face at rest that reads as sad to others — even when the person isn’t feeling that way. The treatment goal is usually to a more neutral expression at rest, not to make the face look perpetually happy. Subtle improvement in mouth corner position is enough to change the impression.


The volumetric change is visible immediately. Mild swelling for 2 to 5 days settles. The "final" result is what you see at the 2-week mark.


No — the face returns to whatever state it was in before treatment. Hyalase dissolves only the filler, not your underlying tissue.


It dramatically improves them but doesn’t eliminate them entirely — some line is anatomical rather than purely age-related, and complete erasure would produce an unnatural look. The aim is restoring a youthful balance, not making the face flat.


A useful self-test: lift the skin in front of your ears upward and slightly back with your fingertips. If the result is what you’re hoping for, surgery is likely to give you close. If the result is too dramatic for what you want, filler-based maintenance is probably the right next step. A consultation provides a more definitive assessment.


Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·


Medically reviewed by , GMC .


Filed Under:


Share this post


Primary Sidebar


I agree to receive marketing ()


I agree to receive marketing communications ()


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist . Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.




Marylebone

London

W1U 6RN




Mon – Sat, 9am – 6pm

Saturday consultations available


댓글목록

등록된 댓글이 없습니다.