A botched treatment refers to a cosmetic procedure that has gone wrong and resulted in undesirable or unintended outcomes. This can include complications such as scarring, uneven results, or unnatural-looking appearance. If you have experienced a botched treatment, it is important to seek the help of a reputable and experienced provider at an aesthetic medicine clinic for corrective or revision procedures. They can evaluate your case and offer the best course of action to help improve the appearance of the treated area.
See all treatmentsHonest filler correction and second opinions in Scottsdale — HA dissolution, re-balancing, and clear answers about what's fixable.
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Puffiness under the eyes that won’t settle. Lips that look uneven or overfilled. Filler that seems to have moved from where it was placed. A Botox result that dropped a brow instead of lifting it. These outcomes are more common than the industry likes to acknowledge — and most of them are correctable. Coming in for a second opinion is not an admission of bad judgment. It’s the practical next step.
Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD begins every correction consultation with a full assessment — what was injected, where, how long ago, and what type — before recommending anything. Correction is never one-size-fits-all: some botched cosmetic treatment situations require immediate dissolution, others benefit from a staged approach or a waiting period to optimize outcomes. The consult produces a clear plan, not pressure to book something.
For broader facial re-balancing after correction, see Aesthetic Facial Balancing. Thread lift complications: Thread Lift Gone Wrong. Facial asymmetry from prior work: Facial Asymmetry.
Scope. Covers HA filler dissolution (hyaluronidase), Botox correction strategies, and corrective re-treatment with Restylane or RHA after poor outcomes. Clear referrals for complications outside non-surgical scope — vascular occlusion, laser burns, granuloma, infection.
Provider & candidacy. Dr. Borakowski, NMD, oversees all filler correction and dissolution. Candidates: anyone with a prior HA filler result they want assessed or corrected. Non-HA fillers (Sculptra, Radiesse) cannot be dissolved with hyaluronidase — those cases require a different management conversation.
Downtime & next step. Dissolution: mild swelling 24–48 hrs, visible improvement typically within 48 hrs. Botox complications self-resolve in weeks. Start with a consultation focused on assessment — not a pre-booked procedure.
Filler complications arise from overfilling, an incorrect plane of injection, a wrong product choice for the anatomy, or filler migration over time into adjacent tissue. Understanding which pattern applies determines the correction path. Most botched cosmetic procedures involving HA filler are fixable — the variables are timing and technique.
Too much product placed in a single area — cheeks, lips, tear trough — creates a puffy or disproportionate result. HA fillers attract additional water volume over the days following injection, which can amplify the effect beyond what was visible immediately. Too much filler is the most common filler complaint we hear in consultations.
Correction route: Hyaluronidase dissolution — calibrated to the area. Visible results in 24–48 hrs.Tyndall effect: a blue-grey cast visible under the skin, most common under the eyes, caused by filler placed too superficially where light scatters off the product. Filler migration means the filler has shifted from its original injection site into adjacent tissue planes, creating an irregular or raised contour — most visible at the lip border or in the tear trough.
Correction route: Targeted hyaluronidase. Migration may need a staged approach — dissolve, wait 2–4 weeks, then reassess.Botox is temporary — effects metabolize in 3–4 months, and most complications resolve on their own well before that. Dropped brow (ptosis) from migration of toxin into the levator palpebrae muscle typically corrects itself within 6–8 weeks. Asymmetric lift, an over-frozen forehead, or unexpected results in the lower face follow a similar timeline. The emotional experience is real; the outcome is not permanent.
Correction route: Timeline education, expectation management. Supportive correction Botox where anatomy permits. Waiting is frequently the honest answer.Vascular occlusion after injection — sudden blanching, pain, mottled skin, or any change in vision — is rare but a medical emergency. Laser burns, thermal injuries, granulomas, persistent nodules that don’t respond to hyaluronidase, and suspected infections are outside the scope of non-surgical aesthetics. Honest referral is the most important thing a provider can offer here.
Correction route: DB does not treat vascular occlusion, active infection, granuloma, or laser scarring. We provide clear referrals and clinical guidance.Four pathways cover the majority of what we see in corrective consultations. Which route applies depends on what was injected, how long ago, and what outcome the patient is seeking. Correction injectables and dissolution are performed under Dr. Borakowski’s naturopathic medical oversight.
One of the most useful things a second-opinion consult can provide is helping a patient understand whether their situation will resolve on its own or requires intervention. The answer significantly shapes next steps and timing.
Botox is temporary. These outcomes are distressing but not permanent — they fade as the toxin metabolizes.
HA filler does not simply fade. These outcomes require intervention — most are readily correctable with hyaluronidase.
| Feature | Hyaluronidase Dissolution | Botox Wait & Correct | Re-Balancing Filler | Derm Referral |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issue type | HA filler overfill, migration, Tyndall, lumps | Botox ptosis, asymmetry, over-frozen | Poor filler outcome — after dissolution settles | Vascular occlusion, granuloma, laser burns, infection |
| Mechanism | Enzyme breaks down HA filler; tissue reabsorbs | Toxin metabolizes over weeks; correction Botox where helpful | Corrective HA placement after tissue has settled | Medical / dermatology evaluation and treatment |
| Timeline to results | 24–48 hrs improvement; full at 2 weeks | 6–16 weeks depending on issue | Results at 2 weeks, refined by 4–6 weeks | Varies by specialist and condition |
| Sessions typical | 1; second session if migration persists | 1 (if correction Botox used) + wait | 1 corrective session | Specialist-dependent |
| Best candidate | Any HA filler complication not involving vascular compromise | Any Botox complication; clear timeline given at consult | Patient who wants restoration after dissolution has settled | Suspected vascular, infectious, or structural complication |
| Limitations | Non-HA fillers (Sculptra, Radiesse) cannot be dissolved | Cannot reverse Botox — can only manage during wait | Requires clean tissue baseline after dissolution | Outside DB scope — warm referral provided |
Most filler and Botox complications are cosmetic concerns — uncomfortable, but not dangerous. A small subset are medical emergencies. Knowing the difference matters.
Vascular occlusion after injection: sudden sharp pain at or near the injection site, skin blanching (going white), livedo reticularis (mottled/net-like skin discoloration), skin darkening, or any change in vision immediately or within hours of treatment — these are a medical emergency. Go to an emergency room or call 911 immediately. Do not wait to see if it resolves. This is not a condition that Desert Bloom treats.
Granuloma or persistent non-resolving nodule: a firm lump that does not soften or respond to hyaluronidase may be a foreign body granuloma — this requires dermatology or medical evaluation, not further injection attempts. Attempting to treat a granuloma with more filler worsens the outcome.
Signs of infection: increasing redness spreading beyond the injection site, increasing warmth, swelling, fever, or discharge after any aesthetic procedure — seek medical evaluation promptly. Do not apply heat or additional treatments until infection is ruled out.

“My first job in any correction consult is honesty — not just about what I can fix, but about what you should actually do next. Some results need to be dissolved today. Some benefit from waiting. And some belong in a different specialist’s office. Knowing the difference, and saying it plainly, is the whole point of the consult.”
A correction consultation with Dr. Borakowski starts with a full assessment — what was injected, where it is now, and what the realistic options are — before anything else is discussed. You leave with a clear picture of what’s correctable, what requires waiting, and what needs a different specialist.
No obligation. No judgment about where you went or what you were told. If non-surgical correction doesn’t apply to your situation, we say so.
Desert Bloom Skincare Center offers personalized skincare consultation to help you achieve a flawless and radiant complexion. Book your appointment today and let our expert team of skincare professionals address your specific concerns and help you reach your skincare goals.
Phone:(480) 567-8180
E-mail:info@desertbloomskincare.com
Get Directions →Desert Bloom Skincare is conveniently located in the Shea Corridor of North Scottsdale, within Edwards Professional Park I — minutes from HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center and the Mayo Clinic Scottsdale Campus.
We proudly provide expert non-surgical rhinoplasty and PDO thread lifts to patients across the Southwest: