Non-surgical temple volume restoration — HA filler, Sculptra, and bio-stimulators guided by anatomy in Scottsdale.
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Hollow temples are one of the earliest and most telling signs of facial aging — yet one of the least discussed. The concave indentation that appears at the sides of the forehead changes the entire silhouette of the upper face: the skull becomes more visible, the eyes look more sunken, and the face reads as older and more tired even when the skin is still in good condition. Temple hollowing is often the reason a face looks “off” in photos before wrinkles or laxity have noticeably set in.
Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD starts every temple consultation with a driver assessment — because the underlying cause (bone resorption, fat-pad atrophy, muscle atrophy, or structural genetics) determines the right product and technique. HA fillers, Sculptra, Radiesse, and PRP biofiller each have a specific role in this anatomy. Choosing the wrong one for the wrong driver produces an over-inflated or short-lived result.
Temple injections also sit in one of the higher-risk anatomical zones in facial aesthetics — the frontal branch of the facial nerve and the deep temporal artery require precise plane selection. This is not a place to save money on a provider.
Part of our Volume Loss concern hub — see also Aesthetic Facial Balancing.
Scope: Temple Filler (HA: Restylane Lyft or RHA 4), Sculptra (poly-L-lactic acid collagen builder), Radiesse (calcium hydroxylapatite scaffold), and PRP Biofiller (Velora HA-PRP adjunct). Starting at $800 for HA filler. Sculptra series from $850/session × 3–4 sessions.
Candidacy: All Fitzpatrick types. Best candidates have noticed upper-face narrowing, visible temporal concavity, or a skeletal appearance in photos. Not suitable during pregnancy or active infection. Muscle-atrophy hollowing (severe weight loss) requires assessment — fillers alone may not fully restore.
Downtime & start: HA filler — mild swelling and possible bruising 24–48 hrs, results visible immediately. Sculptra — gradual onset over 6–8 weeks per session. The first appointment is a consultation; Dr. Borakowski maps the driver and selects the product before any injection is scheduled.
Temple hollowing is rarely one thing. Most patients present with two or three overlapping drivers — which is why a quick “add filler here” approach without a driver assessment frequently under-delivers. The four mechanisms below are the clinical framework we use at Desert Bloom to determine which product will produce a durable, proportional result.
The temporal and sphenoid bones gradually remodel with age, losing projection and density. As the skeletal foundation shrinks, the entire column of overlying fat and soft tissue loses its scaffolding and collapses inward. This is the most universal driver — present to some degree in nearly every case of temple hollowing after 40.
Treatment direction: Bio-stimulator (Sculptra or Radiesse) or deep HA filler to restore skeletal projectionTwo distinct fat compartments occupy the temporal fossa: the deep temporal fat pad (under the temporalis fascia) and the superficial temporal fat pad (subcutaneous). Both thin with age — but the deep pad loss creates the most severe visible concavity. Rapid weight loss or caloric restriction accelerates fat-pad atrophy dramatically, causing hollowing to appear decades ahead of schedule.
Treatment direction: HA filler (Restylane Lyft / RHA 4) placed at the correct depth to replace lost pad volumeThe temporalis is a large chewing muscle that fills a significant portion of the temporal fossa. With severe or prolonged caloric deficit, systemic illness, or extreme weight loss, the muscle itself shrinks — creating a deeper, more structural hollow that fillers alone may not fully address. Identifying muscle atrophy versus fat atrophy changes the product choice and realistic expectations conversation.
Treatment direction: Sculptra series for collagen remodeling; HA filler for partial improvement when muscle loss is mildSome faces are structurally predisposed to temple hollowing — a narrow bitemporal width, a flat temporal bone, or a narrow zygomatic arch provides less skeletal projection from the start. These patients may notice hollowing in their 20s or early 30s independent of aging or weight changes. Treatment is identical to age-driven hollowing but may require earlier intervention and longer maintenance cycles.
Treatment direction: Same product options — HA filler or bio-stim — but timing and driver awareness differ at consultationTemple hollowing isn’t reserved for older patients. The timeline varies significantly by driver — genetic cases appear in the late 20s, fat-pad atrophy accelerates with any significant weight loss, and age-related bone resorption typically becomes visible in the mid-30s to 40s. The consistent early sign across all types is the same: the face looks narrower at the top than it used to, with a shadow or concavity visible between the outer brow and the temporal hairline.
Other early markers: eyes that look more deep-set in photos than in person; a pronounced brow bone ridge where the forehead used to be smooth; a “skeleton visible” quality under harsh lighting or in high-contrast photography; and an overall upper-face narrowing that makes the midface cheekbones appear disproportionately prominent by comparison. Many patients describe it as looking tired regardless of how much sleep they get — or older in photos than they feel.
Four injectable options address temple hollowing at Desert Bloom — each with a distinct mechanism and ideal use case. Which one leads (or whether they’re combined) depends on the dominant driver identified at consultation. HA filler is first-line for most patients; bio-stimulators are preferred when hollowing is moderate to severe or when the goal is collagen remodeling over time.
Related treatment context: Aesthetic Facial Balancing when temple hollowing is one part of broader multi-zone volume loss, and Volume Loss for the full concern hub covering midface, cheek, and under-eye hollowing alongside temples.
Temple treatments broadly fall into two categories. The right one depends on how severe the hollowing is, how quickly you want to see a result, and whether reversibility or longevity matters more to you.
Immediate, reversible, precise. The fastest path to restored temple volume.
Gradual collagen building for longer-lasting results and deeper tissue improvement.
| Feature | Temple Filler (Restylane Lyft) | Temple Filler (RHA 4) | Sculptra | Radiesse | PRP Biofiller (Velora) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | HA gel fills temple volume immediately | Dynamic HA — moves naturally with expression | Poly-L-lactic acid stimulates collagen production | CaHA scaffold + collagen induction | HA + PRP — tissue quality and collagen support |
| Onset | Immediate (same day) | Immediate (same day) | Gradual — 6–8 weeks per session | Immediate + progressive over 3–6 months | Gradual — tissue improvement over weeks |
| Duration | 12–18 months | 12–18 months | 2+ years | 12–18 months | Adjunct — varies by combination |
| Sessions | 1 | 1 | 3–4 sessions (series) | 1 | 1 (combined with other treatment) |
| Reversible | Yes — hyaluronidase | Yes — hyaluronidase | No | No | Partial (HA component only) |
| Best for | Structural support, first-time, immediate result | Natural movement priority, moderate hollowing | Moderate–severe, longevity priority | Immediate + progressive combo result | Adjunct when skin thinning is a secondary concern |
The temporal fossa is one of the higher-risk injection zones in facial aesthetics. The frontal branch of the facial nerve runs superficially through the superficial temporal fascia — damage to it can cause permanent brow paralysis. The deep temporal artery (a branch of the maxillary artery) sits in the deep plane; inadvertent intravascular injection can cause vascular occlusion with serious consequences including tissue necrosis and, in rare cases, vision complications. Safe temple injection requires precise anatomical knowledge of tissue planes, appropriate product selection for depth, and aspiration or slow retrograde technique. At Desert Bloom, Dr. Borakowski performs all temple injections herself. If you are considering temple filler anywhere, confirm your provider has advanced facial anatomy training and significant experience with this specific zone — not just general dermal filler certification.
Temple hollowing is typically driven by one or more of four factors: bone resorption in the sphenoid and temporal bones, atrophy of the deep and superficial temporal fat pads, temporalis muscle atrophy (especially with significant weight loss or systemic illness), and genetic predisposition to a narrow bitemporal width or flat temporal bone. Most patients have two or more drivers contributing simultaneously, which is why a consultation-based driver assessment matters before selecting a product.
It depends on the driver. Age-related bone resorption and fat-pad atrophy usually become visible in the mid-30s to 40s. Genetics-driven hollowing can appear as early as the 20s. Significant weight loss or caloric restriction can accelerate fat-pad and muscle atrophy by decades — patients in their 20s or 30s who have experienced rapid weight loss sometimes present with hollowing that would typically not appear until 50. There is no single age threshold; the driver determines the timeline.
It depends on the severity of hollowing and the dominant driver. For mild to moderate hollowing, Restylane Lyft or RHA 4 (HA filler) provides an immediate, reversible result and is first-line for most patients. For moderate to severe hollowing where longevity and tissue rebuilding are priorities, Sculptra is the preferred option — it builds collagen over a series of sessions and lasts 2+ years. Radiesse is a strong middle-ground option when both immediate correction and progressive collagen induction are wanted. At Desert Bloom, HA options are Restylane and RHA only — not Juvederm Voluma.
In the hands of an anatomically trained provider, yes. Temple filler has a strong safety record when performed with correct technique and product selection. The risk profile increases significantly with less experienced injectors — the frontal branch of the facial nerve and the deep temporal artery both run in this zone, and wrong-plane injection can cause permanent motor nerve damage or vascular complications. Choosing a provider specifically experienced with this anatomy — not just generally certified in filler — is the primary safety variable.
HA filler (Restylane Lyft or RHA 4): 12–18 months typical, with variation by individual metabolism, exercise level, and injection volume. Sculptra: 2 years or longer after completing the full series; results build gradually and last well beyond HA. Radiesse: 12–18 months. PRP Biofiller (Velora): used as an adjunct — the tissue-quality improvement component varies by patient. Most patients schedule HA temple filler maintenance annually; Sculptra patients typically need touch-up sessions every 2 years.
Yes — and for moderate to severe hollowing, it is often the best standalone option. Because Sculptra builds collagen progressively, it does not provide an immediate correction visible the same day. Patients choose Sculptra when they have the time for a series (3–4 sessions over 3–4 months) and prefer a result that builds naturally and lasts longer than HA filler. Some patients combine Sculptra with a small amount of HA filler in the first session to see an immediate correction while the collagen-building effect develops.
Yes — injectable treatments can restore temple volume non-surgically and without any surgical risk, recovery time, or scarring. HA filler results are fully reversible with hyaluronidase. Bio-stimulators (Sculptra, Radiesse) are not reversible but fade naturally over 1–2+ years. In cases of severe temporalis muscle atrophy from extreme weight loss, non-surgical correction has limits — fillers can improve the appearance significantly but may not fully reproduce the volume that was lost from a structurally atrophied muscle. Dr. Borakowski will give you an honest assessment of realistic outcomes at the consultation.
Dr. Borakowski assesses all temple hollowing cases with a driver-first approach — identifying whether bone, fat-pad, muscle, or structural factors are dominant before any product is selected. Complimentary consultation. No pressure. Honest scope assessment including referral if non-surgical correction has limits for your specific case.
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Phone:(480) 567-8180
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