Manhattan Botox doctors

Ronald Shelton, MD Ronald Shelton, MD
Manhattan Dermatologist
260 E 66th St, New York
826 answers
Steven Wallach, MD Steven Wallach, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
1049 Fifth Ave Suite 2D, New York
606 answers
David Shafer, MD David Shafer, MD
New York Plastic Surgeon
10 East 53rd Street 25th Floor, New York
256 answers
George J. Beraka, MD George J. Beraka, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
875 Park Ave at 78th Street, New York
177 answers
Jessica J. Krant, MD, MPH Jessica J. Krant, MD, MPH
Manhattan Dermatologic Surgeon
860 Fifth Avenue Ground Floor, New York
109 answers
Joseph A. Eviatar, MD Joseph A. Eviatar, MD
Bronx Oculoplastic Surgeon
157 W 19th St, New York
103 answers
Robert L. Kraft, MD Robert L. Kraft, MD
New York Plastic Surgeon
112-03 Queens Blvd Ste 205, Forest Hills
78 answers
Ted Brezel, MD Ted Brezel, MD
New York Dermatologist
79-59 Myrtle Avenue, Glendale
62 answers
Kenneth R. Francis, MD Kenneth R. Francis, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
114 E. 71st Street Suite 1-W, New York
59 answers
Jordana Gilman, MD Jordana Gilman, MD
New York Dermatologic Surgeon
328 East 75th Street Suite A, New York
35 answers
Joshua Zeichner, MD Joshua Zeichner, MD
Manhattan Dermatologist
5 East 98th Street 5th Floor, New York
27 answers
Bruce Katz, MD Bruce Katz, MD
New York Dermatologic Surgeon
60 E 56th St Fl 2, New York
25 answers
Steven J. Pearlman, MD Steven J. Pearlman, MD
New York Facial Plastic Surgeon
521 Park Ave, New York
24 answers
Darrick E. Antell, MD Darrick E. Antell, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
850 Park Avenue, New York
23 answers
William B. Rosenblatt, MD William B. Rosenblatt, MD
New York Plastic Surgeon
308 E 79th St Suite 1D, New York
17 answers
Andrew Miller, MD Andrew Miller, MD
Edison Facial Plastic Surgeon
1150 Amboy Ave, Edison
15 answers
Richard W. Westreich, MD Richard W. Westreich, MD
Manhattan Facial Plastic Surgeon
45 West 67th Street , Manhattan
15 answers
Yael Halaas, MD Yael Halaas, MD
Manhattan Facial Plastic Surgeon
60 East 56th Street Suite 3, New York
15 answers
Elan B. Singer, MD Elan B. Singer, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
737 Park Avenue, New York
15 answers
Channing R. Barnett, MD Channing R. Barnett, MD
New York Dermatologist
163A East 70th St., New York
13 answers
Nelson L. Novick, MD Nelson L. Novick, MD
New York Dermatologic Surgeon
500 E 85th St Suite P-1, New York
13 answers
A. Peter Salas, MD A. Peter Salas, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
1016 Fifth Avenue, New York
12 answers
Robert M. Freund, MD Robert M. Freund, MD
New York Plastic Surgeon
170 East End Avenue Suite CS, New York
9 answers
Joshua L. Fox, MD Joshua L. Fox, MD
Long Island Dermatologic Surgeon
165 Roslyn Road, Roslyn Heights
7 answers
Kari L. Colen, MD Kari L. Colen, MD
New York Plastic Surgeon
742 Park Avenue, New York
6 answers
Jeffrey Schiller, MD Jeffrey Schiller, MD
New York Oculoplastic Surgeon
1550 Richmond Avenue, Staten Island
6 answers
David Schlessinger, MD David Schlessinger, MD
New York Oculoplastic Surgeon
75 Froehlich Farm Blvd., Woodbury
6 answers
Tracy Pfeifer, MD Tracy Pfeifer, MD
Manhattan Plastic Surgeon
565 Park Ave , New York
3 answers
George Yang, MD George Yang, MD
New York Facial Plastic Surgeon
132 East 76th Street Suite 2B, New York
3 answers
Ramtin Kassir, MD Ramtin Kassir, MD
New York Facial Plastic Surgeon
799 Park Avenue, New York
3 answers
Adam Hamawy, MD Adam Hamawy, MD
Westchester Plastic Surgeon
1 Theall Road , Rye
2 answers
Philip Miller, MD Philip Miller, MD
New York Facial Plastic Surgeon
60 East 56th 3rd Floor, New York
2 answers
Arash Akhavan, M.D. Arash Akhavan, M.D.
Manhattan Dermatologic Surgeon
315 West 57th Street Suite 405, New York
2 answers
Kavita Mariwalla, MD Kavita Mariwalla, MD
New Haven Dermatologic Surgeon
10 Union Square East Suite 3C, New York
2 answers
Ran Y. Rubinstein, MD Ran Y. Rubinstein, MD
Manhattan Facial Plastic Surgeon
200 Stony Brook Court Suite 2, Newburgh
2 answers

Recent Answers

After 3 Years of Having Botox for Crows Feet I Have Indents Under my Eyes Will They Go Away?

After having Botox at the corner of my eyes I have indents under my eyes a kind of deflated look to the too of my cheeks, my under eye wrinkles are much worse & my crows feet have come back with a vengeance.I really don't want to make it all worse but it's getting me down I last had Botox around 4 months ago, will the deflated look improve?

A: under eye hollowness and Botox

You may get the best answer to your questions by asking the provider you gave you the last Botox injections if photographs were taken prior to the botox administration and then comparing those photos with your appearance now.  Botox should not cause any long lasting effect.  I have never seen crows feet worsening compared to baseline after the Botox wore off, nor am I aware as to how it would cause a hollowness of the lower eyelids.

Ronald Shelton, MD
Manhattan Dermatologist
Botox to the Glabella Caused Under Eye Bags, Is This Normal? What Can I Do? (photo)

I had 8 units of Botox to the upper forehead a week ago. I went back because a still had a few lines above my brows. The doctor said i needed to have my glabella done to support the forehead. So she injected 8 units into the glabella. The next morning my eyes were swollen and I have HUGE bags under my eyes, that were NEVER there before. This was my very first botox experience and I'm worried sick that these bags won't go away. Is this common, is there anything I can do?

A: swollen lower eyelids after botox for glabella

It sounds that your doctor is very appropriate in the treatment plan. The units were not too high. I can't imagine how the Botox would have affected your lower eyelids unless you had the crows feet injected 8 days ago along with the forehead, but you made no mention of that. Possibly, if you had a numbing cream applied prior to the treatment the day before the glabella, you are seeing a dermatologic swelling reaction from that? Gravity often pulls fluids from swelling or dermatitis of the forehead down to the lower eyelids.  There might be some coincidental occurrence of sinusitis, etc.

Ronald Shelton, MD
Manhattan Dermatologist
Is the Orbicularis Oculi Muscle Ever Frozen with Botox Injections?

I read the paragraph below on an Oprah.com article, and was wondering if this muscle is commonly or ever frozen by botox injections? "When someone smiles out of genuine delight, a facial muscle called the orbicularis oculi involuntarily contracts, crinkling the skin around the eyes. Most of us are incapable of deliberately moving this muscle, which means that when a person fakes a smile, her orbicularis oculi likely won't budge."

A: Botox relaxes the orbicularis oculi muscle in the crows feet in Oprah's article

To minimize and soften the crows feet lines, the Botox is purposefully injected into the outer corner of the eyelid to affect this muscle.  This is the muscle that allows us to squint and most people can squint voluntarily so I disagree with the statement to which you referred in the article.

Ronald Shelton, MD
Manhattan Dermatologist
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