Reviews you can trust, from real people like you.      
How it works
  • Our highly-trained Review Moderation team evaluates all reviews before they're published to ensure they're written by people like you and not a member of a doctor's office.
  • This multi-step process takes up to 24 hours from review submission to publication.
  • Doctors can't pay to have reviews removed or hidden.
  • Reviews are only removed at the reviewer's request or if they violate our Terms of Service.

If you have questions or believe we should re-evaluate a published review, let us know.

Sort by:
*Treatment results may vary

I visited my plastic surgeon to get a scar...

I visited my plastic surgeon to get a scar revision surgery on my forehead for my upcoming wedding in July 2016. My surgeon explained to me that he needed to physically cut out the old scar, stitch it together, and then he injected my forehead above my left eyebrow with dysport so that the new scar could heal without being disturbed. The surgery seemed to go very routinely and the healing was great. A few days later he took the stitches out and it was still looking good. About four days after my procedure and being injected with the dysport, my eye my left eyelid began to swell and then droop down significantly. On the 5th day my left eye was nearly shut. I am now 11 days out from my procedure and dysport injection and my eye has not improved at all. It is still almost shut when relaxed and my right eye is open so wide...trying to compensate for the drooped lid. I am devastated. I went back to my doctor who apologized, diagnosed me with ptosis, and prescribed me iopidine drops to try to raise the lid. They work minimally if at all. I have resorted to taping my left eyebrow up in order to have any vision out of my left eye so I can go to work. I am very depressed and cry everyday. I am so afraid that this will be permanent even though my doctor as assured me that it won't be. Has anyone else been through this? When can I expect to see some improvement? Will my eye ever return to normal?