Eye Rejuvenation
The eye area is often the first place where the signs of aging, fatigue, and volume loss become visible. Dark circles, hollowing, fine lines, and puffiness can make you look tired regardless of how you feel, and they rarely improve on their own without the right intervention.

About Eye Rejuvenation
The skin around the eyes is thinner and more delicate than anywhere else on the face, which is why it tends to show the earliest signs of ageing. A combination of factors contributes to the changes most people notice in this area over time.
Volume loss in the tear trough, the groove between the lower eyelid and cheek, creates a hollow or shadowed appearance that can look like dark circles even when pigmentation is not the primary cause. Fine lines and crow's feet develop from repeated muscle movement and a loss of elasticity in the surrounding skin. Puffiness can result from fluid retention, fat pad displacement, or loss of structural support beneath the eye. Skin laxity on the upper and lower lids contributes to a heavier, more tired appearance.
Because each of these concerns has a different cause, the most effective approach often involves a combination of treatments tailored to what is actually driving the changes in your specific eye area.
Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Crow's feet are dynamic wrinkles driven by the orbicularis oculi muscle that contracts with smiling and squinting. Anti-wrinkle injections are one of the most effective treatments for this area, relaxing the muscle activity responsible for the lines. For more established crow's feet with a static component, combining injections with collagen-stimulating treatments produces a more comprehensive result.
Under-eye puffiness has several possible causes. Fluid retention, which tends to be worse in the morning, is one of the most common. Loss of collagen in the lower lid also allows the skin to become looser and more prone to swelling. The cause determines the most appropriate treatment approach.
Tear trough filler typically lasts between 9 and 18 months, though results vary depending on the product used, the amount placed, and individual metabolism.
Yes, to a degree. Eye creams containing retinol, peptides, caffeine, and vitamin C can improve fine lines, reduce puffiness, and brighten mild discolouration over consistent long-term use. However, their effects on hollowing, significant laxity, and established wrinkles are limited. Clinical treatments address these concerns at a depth and with a degree of structural change that topical products cannot replicate.


