MRI shocker: the “temporary” fillers in your cheeks may be camping out for a decade—and throwing a pool party while they’re there.

When Beverly Hills oculoplastic surgeon Dr. Kami Parsa uploaded a 60-second TikTok last summer, he expected a few curious scroll-bys. Instead, 12.4 million phones froze on the same eerie green blobs pulsing inside an MRI: old hyaluronic-acid filler that had multiplied inside one patient’s face.

Here’s the math that made everyone gasp: the woman had been given about 12 syringes over six years—roughly 13 cc of gel. The scan showed almost 28 cc still lodged under her skin. Parsa explains the glow-up turned glow-balloon like this: HA loves water, so it swells, and the surrounding tissue stretches to make room. Think sponge in a rainstorm.

Cosmetic clinics market HA as a six-month selfie fix, but Parsa says fragments can linger up to 10 years, especially if you top up before the last dose fizzles out. That slow-motion build-up is why he sees so many “pillow-face” cases—faces puffed until the cheekbones vanish and every angle looks like a Snapchat filter gone rogue.

Why the puff happens
Layer on layer: topping up before the old filler fades = buried leftovers

Over-zealous plumping: one session trying to erase every wrinkle at once

Skin fatigue: the extra weight stretches tissue, so even when filler dissolves, lax skin stays behind

Parsa’s mantra these days? “You can’t inject your way back to 16.” Translated: a dab is glam, but a gallon is a gamble.

TikTok users flooded the comments—some swearing off needles forever, others booking dissolution appointments. One viewer admitted her single lip session still feels “like marbles” under the skin years later; another called fillers “expensive poison.”

@kamiparsamd #kamiparsa #fillers #hylenex #dissolvingfiller #dermalfillers #lips #teartroughfiller ♬ Blade Runner 2049 – Synthwave Goose


Parsa isn’t anti-filler; he’s anti-overkill. He recommends spacing treatments, using the absolute minimum, and dissolving before re-upping. If your injector promises “harmless and temporary,” ask to see their MRI stash first.

Bottom line: the quest for an instant baby-face can backfire into a decade-long puff party. Maybe skip that extra syringe and invest in SPF instead.

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