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Skinbar · Inna Chernovol

Sclerotherapy

A minimally invasive vein treatment where a sclerosant is injected to close targeted spider veins or small varicose veins. The treated vein gradually fades as blood reroutes to healthier vessels.

Procedures

  • 1 vial

    190 EUR

    In-office sclerotherapy session using one vial of sclerosant, selected based on vein size and pattern. Aftercare typically includes compression and activity guidance to support results.

  • 2 vials

    350 EUR

    Extended sclerotherapy session for larger treatment areas or more extensive patterns using two vials. Your plan is based on clinical assessment and expected response.

FAQ

Sclerotherapy: what clients ask

Practical guidance for planning, downtime, and safety—tailored to this treatment group.

How do I choose the right treatment for my skin goals?

I start with a consultation and a quick skin assessment (concerns, sensitivities, medical history, downtime preferences, and your timeline). From there, I recommend the smallest effective plan—often a combination of professional treatments plus a simple home routine (especially daily SPF).

When should I postpone treatment?

Please postpone if you’re unwell, have an active skin infection, open wounds in the treatment area, a fresh sunburn, or an uncontrolled flare of a skin condition. If you’re pregnant or breastfeeding, some procedures and ingredients may not be recommended—tell me and I’ll suggest safer options.

How safe are dermal fillers? What are the real risks?

Most side effects are temporary (swelling, bruising, tenderness). The rare but most serious risk is accidental injection into a blood vessel, which can cause skin injury and, in extreme cases, vision problems. This is why provider training, anatomy knowledge, and an emergency protocol matter. Hyaluronic acid fillers are reversible with hyaluronidase if needed.

Collagen stimulators vs. HA fillers: what’s the difference?

HA fillers primarily add immediate volume and definition. Collagen stimulators are designed to trigger your body’s collagen remodeling, so results are more gradual and tend to look very natural. Which one is right depends on whether you need structure now, skin quality improvement over time, or both.

What results can I realistically expect—and how fast?

Some treatments give an immediate “fresh” glow (facials, carbon peel). Collagen-stimulating procedures (HIFU, RF microneedling, collagen stimulators) build gradually—typically over weeks to a few months. Your results depend on baseline skin condition, consistency (courses matter), and aftercare (sun protection is critical).

Does HIFU hurt and when will I see results?

Sensation varies: many people feel warmth, tingling, or brief discomfort during pulses. There’s usually no downtime. Some tightening can be subtle at first, with the most noticeable change commonly appearing over 8–12 weeks as collagen remodels.

Not sure where to start? Book a consultation and I’ll map out the safest, most effective plan for your goal and timeline.