Dbst Dev
Bronze
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- Nov 24, 2024
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To create volume on any desired spot
1. The Ingredient: The patch contains a micro-dose of a known irritant like Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) or another potent alkali. This is the same type of chemical in some strong oven cleaners, but here it's purified and controlled to be safe for this specific use.
2. The Mechanism:
· You stick the small, circular patch only on the dip just below your nose hump.
· The patch has a tiny, precise amount of the chemical in a gel matrix.
· This chemical causes a controlled, very shallow micro-injury to the top layers of your skin. It doesn't burn or hurt; it just sends a strong signal to the body to produce collagen in the desired spot
3. The "Long-Term" Result:
· the body's natural response to injury is to lay down collagen to repair the area.
· By repeatedly causing this micro-injury in the exact same spot over weeks, you train your body to build up a tiny, stable bump of your own natural collagen fibers right under the skin.
· Collagen is permanent. Once it's laid down, it's there for the long haul, just like a minor scar.
1. The Ingredient: The patch contains a micro-dose of a known irritant like Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) or another potent alkali. This is the same type of chemical in some strong oven cleaners, but here it's purified and controlled to be safe for this specific use.
2. The Mechanism:
· You stick the small, circular patch only on the dip just below your nose hump.
· The patch has a tiny, precise amount of the chemical in a gel matrix.
· This chemical causes a controlled, very shallow micro-injury to the top layers of your skin. It doesn't burn or hurt; it just sends a strong signal to the body to produce collagen in the desired spot
3. The "Long-Term" Result:
· the body's natural response to injury is to lay down collagen to repair the area.
· By repeatedly causing this micro-injury in the exact same spot over weeks, you train your body to build up a tiny, stable bump of your own natural collagen fibers right under the skin.
· Collagen is permanent. Once it's laid down, it's there for the long haul, just like a minor scar.

like i get the theory trigger inflammation=force collagen=build volume, but that’s not how skin healing works in practice. you’re not just "stimulating" collagen, you’re damaging tissue and hoping your body rebuilds it evenly, which almost never happens. that’s how people end up with uneven texture, hyperpigmentation, or literal scar tissue instead of volume. using capsaicin or vitamin c that strong near the nose or thin facial skin is wild. both are super reactive, and once you cross that irritation threshold you’re basically rolling the dice with healing. if you want to boost collagen, just use proven stuff like low-level microneedling + vitamin c or retinoids slow, controlled, and actually backed by histological data. this diy "chemical filler" approach sounds cool on paper, but irl it’s just one slip away from permanent skin damage.