How Face Lift Works

Non-surgical face lifting uses focused energy at 3 distinct tissue depths — 1.5mm, 3.0mm, and 4.5mm — to heat collagen fibers to 60-70C, triggering controlled contraction and new collagen production. A full-face session takes 60-90 minutes combining technologies like Ultherapy, Sofwave, Onda, or Inmode. Results develop progressively over 90-180 days as remodeled collagen matures.
How Face Lift Works

How Non-Surgical Face Lifting Targets Skin Layers

Non-surgical face lifting works by delivering controlled thermal energy to specific tissue depths beneath the skin surface. Unlike topical treatments that affect only the epidermis, energy-based face lifting devices penetrate to the dermis and SMAS (Superficial Musculoaponeurotic System) layer, the same structural plane that surgeons manipulate during traditional facelifts. This deep targeting is what distinguishes clinical lifting from surface-level skin tightening.

Each technology reaches a different depth: Ultherapy uses micro-focused ultrasound to create thermal coagulation points at 4.5mm, 3.0mm, and 1.5mm. Sofwave delivers parallel beam ultrasound at 1.5mm depth across a wider treatment zone. Radiofrequency devices like Thermage FLX and Onda heat tissue volumetrically at depths of 2-4mm. By combining 2-3 technologies in a single session, practitioners address all structural layers responsible for facial sagging.

Step-by-Step Face Lift Procedure

Step 1: Consultation and Facial Mapping

The procedure begins with a 15-20 minute consultation where the Aesthetic Medicine Specialist evaluates skin laxity, tissue thickness, and bone structure. Using standardized grading scales, the practitioner maps treatment zones across the forehead, temples, cheeks, jawline, and submentum (under-chin area). Photographs are taken from 5 angles for baseline documentation. This mapping determines which combination of technologies and energy levels will be applied to each facial region.

Step 2: Preparation and Comfort Measures

Topical anesthetic cream containing 4% lidocaine is applied 30-45 minutes before treatment begins. The face is cleansed thoroughly to remove oils and residue. For Ultherapy, ultrasound gel is applied as a coupling medium. Sofwave uses a built-in cooling mechanism that maintains the skin surface at 40C while energy heats deeper tissue to 60-70C. Patients receive a detailed explanation of sensations to expect: brief warmth, mild tingling, and occasional sharp pulses during energy delivery.

Step 3: Energy Delivery and Treatment Execution

The practitioner systematically treats each mapped zone. Ultherapy delivers 300-530 focused ultrasound shots across the face and neck, with each pulse creating a 1mm thermal coagulation point. The real-time ultrasound imaging display allows precise depth targeting. Sofwave applies 100-200 shots using a wider transducer head, covering larger surface areas per pulse. Radiofrequency treatments like Onda deliver energy measured in kilojoules (typically 80-120kJ for full face), heating tissue volumetrically rather than at discrete points.

Combination protocols follow a specific sequence: deeper technologies first (Ultherapy at 4.5mm), then mid-depth (Sofwave at 1.5mm), then volumetric RF (Onda or Titanium). This layered approach takes 60-90 minutes for a comprehensive full-face session. The practitioner adjusts energy levels in real-time based on patient feedback and tissue response, ensuring effective treatment while maintaining comfort throughout.

Technologies Used in Face Lifting

Modern non-surgical face lifting relies on 4 primary energy categories. Micro-focused ultrasound (Ultherapy) creates precise thermal injury points at the SMAS layer, triggering collagen contraction and neocollagenesis. Parallel beam ultrasound (Sofwave) uses Synchronous Ultrasound Parallel Beam Technology to treat the mid-dermis uniformly. Monopolar radiofrequency (Thermage FLX) heats a large tissue volume with a single electrode. Coolwaves technology (Onda) uses 2.45GHz microwave energy for selective fat and collagen remodeling.

Additional modalities include Revinas (microneedling radiofrequency delivering 3,000-12,000 shots per session), Inmode FX (fractional radiofrequency for surface tightening), and absorbable PDO or PCL thread lifting for mechanical repositioning. Suh DH et al. Dermatol Ther. 2020;33(1):e13156. doi:10.1111/dth.13156 The choice depends on the patient's age, degree of laxity, skin thickness, and desired outcome intensity.

What Happens After the Face Lifting Session

Immediately after treatment, mild redness and warmth are visible for 1-4 hours. No bandages or dressings are required. Patients can apply mineral sunscreen and light makeup within 24 hours. The biological lifting process begins within the first week as damaged collagen fibers contract, producing an initial tightening effect of approximately 10-15%. Over the following 90-180 days, fibroblasts produce new type I and type III collagen, gradually increasing skin firmness and elasticity.

A single comprehensive session delivers measurable improvement for 12-24 months. Clinical studies report tissue tightening of 1-2mm in jawline descent measurements at 6 months post-treatment. RE:BERRY Myeongdong provides follow-up assessment at 4-6 weeks and 3 months to document progressive results and determine whether additional treatment sessions would benefit the patient's specific lifting goals.

How Many Face Lift Sessions Are Needed

For mild to moderate laxity, 1 comprehensive session combining 2-3 technologies produces significant results. Patients with advanced sagging or those seeking maximum improvement may benefit from 2 sessions spaced 6-12 months apart. Maintenance protocols typically involve a single-technology touch-up every 12-18 months to sustain collagen production. The total number depends on baseline tissue condition, age, and individual collagen regeneration capacity assessed during the initial consultation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens during a Face Lift session?
A face lift session spans 60-90 minutes and follows 3 stages: consultation with facial mapping (15-20 minutes), topical anesthetic application (30-45 minutes wait), and energy delivery across mapped zones. The practitioner systematically treats the forehead, temples, cheeks, jawline, and under-chin using focused ultrasound and radiofrequency devices.
How long does the procedure take?
The complete appointment takes 2-2.5 hours including 30-45 minutes of numbing cream application and 60-90 minutes of active treatment. A single-technology session like Sofwave alone requires 30-40 minutes of active treatment. Combination protocols using Ultherapy plus radiofrequency take the full 90 minutes for comprehensive coverage.
Does Face Lift hurt?
Pain levels average 3-5 on a 10-point scale with topical anesthetic applied 30-45 minutes beforehand. Ultherapy produces brief sharp pulses at deeper focal depths, while Sofwave uses integrated cooling to maintain comfort at a surface temperature of 40C. Radiofrequency treatments generate gradual warmth that most patients tolerate easily.
How many sessions do I need?
Most patients achieve significant results with 1 comprehensive session combining 2-3 technologies. Patients with advanced laxity may benefit from 2 sessions spaced 6-12 months apart. Maintenance requires a single-technology touch-up every 12-18 months to sustain collagen remodeling and preserve the lifting effect long-term.
What technology is used?
Non-surgical face lifting uses 4 primary energy types: micro-focused ultrasound (Ultherapy) at 4.5mm depth, parallel beam ultrasound (Sofwave) at 1.5mm, monopolar radiofrequency (Thermage FLX) for volumetric heating, and Coolwaves microwave energy (Onda) at 2.45GHz. Thread lifting with absorbable PDO or PCL sutures provides additional mechanical repositioning.
Is non-surgical face lifting safe for all skin types?
Energy-based face lifting is safe across Fitzpatrick skin types I-VI, with complication rates below 2% in clinical studies. Ultrasound-based treatments like Ultherapy and Sofwave bypass melanin entirely, eliminating hyperpigmentation risk that affects laser procedures. Contraindications include active skin infection, metal implants in the treatment area, and pregnancy.
When do face lifting results become visible?
Initial tightening of 10-15% appears within 7-14 days as existing collagen fibers contract from thermal exposure. Progressive improvement continues over 90-180 days as fibroblasts generate new type I and type III collagen. Peak results are visible at 3 months, with clinical measurements showing 1-2mm jawline elevation at 6 months post-treatment.

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