BACN Unveils New Device For Facial Injectables
Clare recently attended to BACN Conference to keep up to date with all the very latest techniques.
She has already had training in this advanced technique which uses a blunt cannula rather than a needle to administer dermal fillers without damaging the surrounding tissues.
A major change in the way anti-ageing ‘fillers’ are being administered means that the risk of bruising and swelling from facial injectables is becoming a thing of the past.
“The introduction of the cannula is truly a technical revolution for professional injectors using facial fillers,” remarked Emma Davies, Chair of the British Association of Cosmetic Nurses (BACN), who explained that by using a cannula, the injector can deliver product to a wide area of the face through a single perforation.
Cannulas are devices with elongated, fine flexible tubes. A needle is used to pierce the patient’s skin and is then replaced by a cannula which can be used to introduce tissue fillers to several sites – for example, the mid-face, cheeks and the naso-labial folds – without puncturing the skin again.
Cannulas are especially useful for particularly sensitive areas of the face, such as around the eyes, and the lips. Because the skin is pierced far less when using a cannula, dermal tissue is less disturbed, there is virtually no discomfort for the patient and discoloration and oedema rarely occur