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Woman reveals what REALLY happens when you get lip filler dissolved

Woman reveals what REALLY happens when you get lip filler dissolved

Daily Mail​6 days ago
A woman has revealed insight into the process of having lip filler dissolved - and admitted that she was left looking 'botched'.
Georgia Goldstein travelled to Hart Medical in Westminster, London, a few months ago to undergo the procedure.
While she said that it was 'the best thing I've ever done', the process wasn't pain-free and left her lips looking swollen.
Taking to TikTok, she said, 'A few months ago, I got all my lip filler dissolved, and it was the best thing I've ever done.
She went on to share images from throughout the process, adding, 'Trigger warning, my face looked butters [ugly].'
Georgia explained that, when the aesthetician put the dissolver in her lips, they swelled drastically.
'Like, imagine, I have to go into work right now and they [her lips] look botched,' she said while showing her bloated lips to the camera.
She continued to show photographs from throughout the process, saying, 'This was pretty much just after going into work and this was the next day, my lips were black, like you can see in this video, they were so, so bruised.'
Georgia added, 'I even tried covering them up with makeup, and it was just all black above my lips.'
The content creator said her lips then 'shrunk', making her feel 'really young', she said, adding, 'And they also went really wrinkly.' One week later, the bruising had gone, she said.
At the end of the process, Georgia went for an ultrasound to check if there was any filler left in her lips, before concluding that getting her fillers dissolved was the 'best thing ever.'
Viewers took to the comment section to share their thoughts on the end result, and one wrote, 'Great more natural result, love.'
A second added, 'Trust the process hun.' While a third user said, 'Look so much better. Love them!'
A fourth commented on Georgia going into work immediately after getting them dissolved, saying 'Honestly the bravery going into work.'
It comes after a woman who claims to have the 'world's biggest lips' revealed what she looked like before undergoing drastic surgery and getting copious amounts of lip filler.
Andrea Ivanova from Bulgaria regularly hits the headlines due to her enhanced appearance, which has seen her fork out an estimated £20,000 on lip filler alone after starting her transformation in 2018.
The 27-year-old has previously admitted she struggles to find love because of her dramatic look, but it hasn't stopped her from achieving her goal of having the biggest lips and cheeks in the world.
Now, she has revealed what she looked like before altering her face via cosmetic enhancements.
In her 'before' photos, a youthful Andrea can be seen with regularly proportioned lips. But since undergoing her enhancement journey, she has become scarcely recognisable.
Her long list of treatments included chin shaping, enlargement and lengthening, jaw shaping and lip augmentation, as well as cheekbone enhancement - all at once.
She's previously spoken about how she likes to stand out from the crowds with her unique look.
'I like exaggerated things like huge lips, a face with many fillers, heavy and eccentric make-up, Andrea said.
'I don't like boring ordinary appearances and I am a fan of huge shapes and eccentric beauties. Natural beauty is boring to me so I decided to change my appearance radically.'
The social media influencer has spoken openly about having had six procedures done in a single day as an 'experiment' - even though her usual doctor refused to do it.
Viewers took to the comment section to share their thoughts on the process - and one said Georgia's lips 'look so much better'
'My doctor was afraid to inject more hyaluronic acid into my lips, but I was adamant that I wanted more, and I will not stop,' Andrea said.
'I wanted to do six procedures at once. Until now, I always did these on different areas of the face on different days.'
Andrea had previously only ever had a maximum of three needles in her face at the same time.
'But this time, I wanted to experiment with myself to see how many injections and [amounts of filler] would affect my body,' she said.
She even had to seek out a doctor in Germany to do the procedures, which went ahead in February last year, as her usual surgeon simply refused.
And even though Andrea was excited about the experience, she confessed it had been extremely painful.
'I have pain all over my face right now and my jaw and chin hurt a lot,' she said at the time.
'It's hard for me to smile because of the pain in my cheekbones and there's a pulling sensation over my face.'
But Andrea insisted the feeling was normal after treatment because the 'filler hadn't settled into place'.
Although she finds eating difficult, Andrea is adamant her lips 'don't hurt'.
She added: 'I only feel a slight discomfort, but that's where I have the most amount of filler and where I've had injections the most amount of times. The more filler there is, the less the area hurts.'
Despite the pain, Andrea doesn't have any plans to slow down or reduce her voluptuous look.
The former philosophy student planned to go to Germany to visit the same surgeon, as her usual doctor is sceptical about going forward with her transformation.
But now even the German medical practitioner has revealed their concerns.
'I had no fears about having so many injections at once because I trust my doctor and they are a great professional in cosmetic surgery,' she said.
'But they are afraid I'll get necrosis and have to have the tissue surgically removed from my lips if I carry on.'
Necrosis is the death of body tissue, which occurs when not enough blood flows to the site, according to the NHS.
This condition can be caused by radiation, chemicals or injury, and in some cases can be fatal.
'There are risks involved, such as inflammation, and raised body temperature, especially with so much at once,' Andrea added.
'I have facial swelling and bruising right now, which is normal due to the many needles, but I think in a few days, I'll recover.'
She continued: 'You shouldn't judge people for their looks. It's their taste and no one has the right to be offended because of it.
'I think I'm going to carry on doing multiple injections in one day going forward, as it makes me very happy.'
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'Heartrending tales of the soldiers who fell victim to the British military's silent killer: 'Asbestos was everywhere years ago... but many old soldiers just shut their gob, got on with it and quietly faded away'
'Heartrending tales of the soldiers who fell victim to the British military's silent killer: 'Asbestos was everywhere years ago... but many old soldiers just shut their gob, got on with it and quietly faded away'

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'Heartrending tales of the soldiers who fell victim to the British military's silent killer: 'Asbestos was everywhere years ago... but many old soldiers just shut their gob, got on with it and quietly faded away'

When Lt Col Crawford Harvey's wife Jacqueline died at the age of 77 from mesothelioma – a terminal cancer caused by asbestos – he remembered all the faded military quarters they had shared during his 39 years of service. Could she have been exposed to the deadly fibres in one of those? 'When people ask me what she was like, I sum her up by describing what she loved – family, fun, flowers, sewing, dogs and friends,' he says. 'She was wonderful.' Lt Col Harvey, 77, didn't think life could get any worse after losing Jacqueline in 2022 after 50 years of marriage. He'd never previously heard of mesothelioma, which kills most of those diagnosed within a year. She had lasted about a year and a half. But then, six months ago, he was diagnosed with it, too. 'We're all going to die of something,' he says. 'But to have two people together for 50 years and then, within the span of four years, both are diagnosed with the same relatively rare cancer caused by asbestos? 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