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Anti Ageing Treatments in London

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Facial ageing is the result of multiple processes happening simultaneously in the skin and underlying tissues — and anti-ageing treatment requires understanding which of these processes is producing which feature on your face. Sun damage, collagen breakdown, fat compartment thinning, bone resorption, and skin thinning all contribute differently, and they respond to different interventions.

This is the comprehensive hub guide: the science of why skin ages, the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic ageing factors, the full range of evidence-based treatments available at Centre for Surgery, and an honest framework for choosing what’s appropriate at each stage. The most effective anti-ageing plan is rarely a single treatment — it’s the right combination, sequenced and maintained over years.

How skin actually ages

The visible signs of facial ageing — fine lines, wrinkles, sagging, dullness, uneven pigmentation, thread veins, coarse texture — are produced by a small number of underlying biological processes. Understanding which process produces which feature determines which treatment is appropriate.

Intrinsic ageing refers to changes that happen naturally with time, regardless of lifestyle. As we age, several inherited and time-dependent processes occur:

Extrinsic ageing refers to changes caused by environmental and lifestyle factors. Up to 90% of visible facial ageing is attributable to extrinsic factors — which is the key piece of good news, these are modifiable.

The dominant extrinsic factor by a substantial margin is chronic ultraviolet (UV) exposure from sunlight. UV radiation drives several damaging processes:

Other significant extrinsic factors include smoking, alcohol consumption, poor diet, facial movement, sleep position, and chronic stress.

For more on the dynamics of how lines and wrinkles develop, see our guide on .

The four foundations of effective anti-ageing care

Before discussing specific treatments, the foundational steps that affect outcomes across every other intervention:

The single highest-impact in preventing facial ageing. Daily SPF 30 or higher applied to the face, as needed throughout the day, reduces UV-driven MMP activation and slows the of damage. The earlier this becomes a habit, the better the long-term outcome — but it’s never too late to start.

Worth noting: SPF in foundation or moisturiser is generally insufficient as a protection layer. A dedicated SPF should be applied first.

Smoking accelerates virtually every ageing processcollagen breakdown, vascular impairment, oxidative stress, and the mechanical effects of repeated lip pursing. The skin of long-term smokers consistently looks 5 to 10 years older than equivalent non-smokers.

Wraparound sunglasses, wide-brim hats, protective clothing, and avoiding deliberate sun exposure all reduce cumulative UV damage. Sleep position and pillow choice can affect one-sided wrinkling. Diet supporting overall skin health — adequate protein, healthy fats, antioxidant-rich foods — provides the building blocks for ongoing skin .

Three categories of topical product have the most robust evidence:

Retinoids (prescription tretinoin or strong retinol) — increase dermal collagen, thicken the skin, and accelerate cell turnover. The most evidence-based topical anti-ageing intervention available.

Vitamin C serumsantioxidant protection, brightening effect, and support for collagen synthesis.

Hyaluronic OnabotulinumtoxinAAbobotulinumtoxinAIncobotulinumtoxinAPrabotulinumtoxinALetibotulinumtoxinARimabotulinumtoxinBHyaluronic Acid FillersCalcium Hydroxylapatite FillersPoly-L-lactic Acid FillersPolymethylmethacrylate FillersAutologous Fat GraftingForehead Lines TreatmentGlabellar Frown Lines TreatmentCrow’s Feet TreatmentBunny Lines TreatmentChemical Brow LiftLip FlipGummy Smile CorrectionMasseter ReductionJaw SlimmingDimpled Chin SmoothingCobblestone Chin SmoothingNefertiti Neck LiftMicro-BotoxMesotoxHyperhidrosis TreatmentChronic Migraine ReliefBruxism TreatmentTMJ TreatmentCervical Dystonia TreatmentNeck Spasm TreatmentBlepharospasm TreatmentLip AugmentationLip ContouringCheekbone EnhancementTear Trough FillersNasolabial Fold SofteningMarionette Line FillersLiquid RhinoplastyNon-Surgical Nose JobJawline ContouringJawline DefinitionChin AugmentationTemple VolumisingHand RejuvenationAcne Scar Subcision Filling topicalssurface hydration that immediately improves skin appearance, though without the deeper benefit of HA treatments.

For patients seeking more aggressive results, prescription-strength systems like Obagi Nu-Derm combine high-concentration retinoids with hydroquinone, vitamins, and chemical exfoliants in a coordinated protocol. These prescription products penetrate deeper than over-the-counter cosmetics — at the dermal cellular level rather than the superficial epidermis where retail products work.

Obagi Nu-Derm benefits include:

Prescription skincare must be assessed and prescribed by a specialist — not purchased online — because it requires individual skin assessment and isn’t appropriate for all skin types, pregnancies, or treatment histories.

In-clinic treatments by category

uses dual laser wavelengths in four sequential treatment modes, including an intra-oral pass that delivers heat to the deeper tissues of the lower face from inside the mouth. The skin, stimulates collagen and production, and addresses surface skin quality. Cost from £600 per session; course of 3-4 typical.

combines microneedling with fractional radiofrequency energy delivered into the deeper layers of the dermis. Stronger tightening than non-ablative laser, longer recovery (4-7 days of pinkness and tiny scabs). Cost from £650 per .

ablative laser treatments that remove the top layer of damaged skin, prompting strong collagen remodelling. Recovery is days, but the result for established lines and skin texture is more pronounced than non-ablative alternatives.

peelsincluding light peels (glycolic, salicylic) and deeper medium-depth peels (TCA). Useful for surface texture, mild pigmentation, and overall skin quality. Often combined with energy-based treatments.

Energy-based treatments work particularly well for: skin texture and tone, mild to moderate skin laxity, surface pigmentation, hyperpigmentation, facial thread veins (with Fotona 4D), and fine lines.

using botulinum toxin relax specific facial muscles to soften dynamic lines. The most evidence-based and predictable single anti-ageing intervention. Cost from £200 (single area) to £400 (three areas). See our for detail.

using hyaluronic acid restore lost volume in the cheeks, tear troughs, temples, jawline, and lips. The right tool for volume-driven concerns rather than wrinkles per se. Reversible with hyalase if needed. See our .

bioremodels skin from within using hybrid cooperative complexes of acid. Doesn’t add volume — improves skin quality, elasticity, and hydration over weeks following treatment. From £350 per session for the face.

stimulate dermal fibroblasts using fragments of DNA-derived molecules. Improves skin quality and hydration, useful as preparation before filler treatment in with poor skin quality.

(Redensity 1, others) deliver hyaluronic acid with amino acids, antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals to improve skin texture and hydration. Three sessions spaced three weeks apart for typical course.

The skin around the eye is the thinnest on the face and needs specialised approaches:

uses the Fotona Er:YAG laser in a periorbital-specific protocol for fine lines, crepiness, and laxity around the eyes.

with products (Teosyal Redensity 2) for hollowing. See our for the comprehensive guide.

Anti-wrinkle injection for crow’s feet — see our guide on .

When skin laxity becomes significant and non-surgical treatments produce diminishing returns, surgical provide more substantial structural correction:

— the standard surgical procedure for advanced facial ageing. Repositions descended SMAS and overlying tissue. last 10 to 15 years.

addresses lower cheek and jawline for patients with moderate ageing not yet warranting a full facelift.

— more advanced technique for the most facial descent.

typically combined with facelift for patients with neck laxity. See our guide on for non-surgical alternatives.

— eyelid for excess upper or lower lid skin.

repositioning a descended brow.

restoring volume permanently using the patient’s own fat. Often combined with facelift surgery.

For a deeper look at how non-surgical and surgical approaches compare for facial ageing, see our .

How to think about treatment by decade

A rough planning guide — genetics vary enormously, but most patients track loosely against this pattern:

Mostly damage accumulating. Focus on prevention:

Active treatment rarely indicated except for dermatological concerns.

Fine lines begin to remain faintly visible at rest, usually at crow’s feet and glabella first. Mid-face volume loss starts subtly.

Reasonable interventions:

Wrinkles becoming static. Volume loss progressing in temples, mid-cheek, tear trough. Skin texture changes — pore size increases, surface roughness. Treatment shifts from prevention to active management.

Reasonable interventions:

Structural changes dominate. Skin laxity in jawline and neck, deeper static lines, significant volume loss.

Conversations include:

Surgical become more decisively superior to extended non-surgical treatment for patients with significant descent. For patients who’ve maintained their face well through earlier decades, surgical intervention can be modest and produce excellent results.

For more on the decision-making, see our guide on .

How to choose your initial treatment

The most useful first step is a comprehensive consultation that maps which specific concerns you have and which treatments address them most effectively. The right starting depends on:

What bothers you specifically. “Tired-looking eyes,” “deep lines around my mouth,” “loose neck skin” all point to different treatment paths.

Your skin quality. Patients with excellent skin quality can often have less intervention; those with significant sun damage may need to address surface changes before volume work makes sense.

Your timeline. Some treatments produce immediate results (filler, AWI); others develop over weeks (Profhilo, lasers); surgical results require recovery time.

Your maintenance preference. Some patients want maintenance (preferring surgery for results); others prefer ongoing non-surgical work with regular .

Your budget across years, not just the initial treatment. Non-surgical maintenance accumulates cost over time; surgical interventions front-load the cost.

At Centre for Surgery, a thorough consultation includes assessment of all these factors and a written, sequenced treatment plan rather than just a recommendation for the most expensive single procedure. Our specialist team — including Dr Spyridon Vlachosprovides honest of which approach matches your specific anatomy, goals, and lifestyle.

Combination strategies that work

The most effective anti-ageing plans typically combine several modalities. Common combinations:

Prevention package (20s-30s): daily SPF + prescription retinoid + vitamin C serum + occasional AWI for emerging lines.

Early intervention package (30s-early 40s): add Profhilo or polynucleotides + selective filler for mid-face volume loss + Fotona 4D maintenance.

Active rejuvenation package (40s-50s): comprehensive AWI + multi-area filler + biostimulators + energy-based treatment (Morpheus8 or Fotona 4D) + prescription skincare.

Pre-surgical optimisation: Profhilo, energy-based treatments, and skincare in the months before planned facial surgery to optimise skin quality going in.

Post-surgical maintenance: Profhilo, AWI, filler, and energy treatments to maintain surgical results over 10+ years.

A consultation establishes which package fits your specific stage and goals.

Cost

Pricing varies by treatment type and area. Indicative starting prices at Centre for Surgery:

, including 0% APR, are available across all treatment types. Bespoke quotations are provided after consultation based on the specific treatment plan recommended for your situation.

Common questions

Daily broad-spectrum SPF is the single highest-impact intervention. Topical retinoids, vitamin C, and protective behaviours (sunglasses, hats, not smoking) provide additional benefit. None of these reverse established changes, but they slow the rate at which new changes develop.

Obagi Nu-Derm contains prescription-strength ingredients that penetrate to the dermal cellular level. Retail cosmeceuticals can only contain non-prescription concentrations and work primarily at the superficial epidermis. The in active ingredient concentration produces measurably different outcomes over time.

The prescription-grade Obagi system contains active ingredients not considered safe in . Pregnant patients should switch to non-prescription Obagi or pregnancy-safe alternatives during pregnancy and breastfeeding.

The Obagi Nu-Derm system is prescription-only and must be prescribed by a specialist after assessment. Online purchases can be counterfeit, ineffective, or unsafe — we recommend against this.

Healthier, smoother skin with more even tone, hyperpigmentation, and improved fine lines over 3 to 6 months of consistent use. Results are gradual rather than but accumulate substantially over time.

on the treatment. AWI every 3 to 4 months. Filler 6 to 18 months depending on area. Profhilo every 6 to 9 months. Energy-based treatments every 12 to 24 months. Skincare daily.

We don’t treat patients under 18 for cosmetic purposes. There’s no upper age limit, but becomes importantsurgical may be more appropriate than continued non-surgical treatment for patients with significant skin laxity.

Some combinations work in a single visit (AWI plus filler). Others need spacingenergy-based treatments and biostimulators are typically from same-day filler work, with 2-week gaps. Your treatment plan will sequence components appropriately.

Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·

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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking sit at the heart of everything we do.

Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.


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