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Body Image, Personality Traits, and Quality of Life in Botulinum Toxin A and Dermal Filler Patients

Body Image, Personality Traits, and Quality of Life in Botulinum Toxin A and Dermal Filler Patients

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2053210722

Body Image, Personality Traits, and Quality of Life in Botulinum Toxin A and Dermal Filler Patients

About this item

Full title

Body Image, Personality Traits, and Quality of Life in Botulinum Toxin A and Dermal Filler Patients

Publisher

New York: Springer US

Journal title

Aesthetic plastic surgery, 2018-08, Vol.42 (4), p.1119-1125

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

New York: Springer US

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Background
The demand for minimally invasive cosmetic procedures has continued to rise, especially in Germany, yet few studies have examined this patient population. The literature in Germany has repeatedly voiced the speculation that users of minimally invasive, skin-rejuvenating procedures displayed a higher tendency toward dysmorphic behavior patterns or, respectively, other abnormal personality traits.
Objectives
The aim of this study was to investigate body image, personality traits, quality of life, and socioeconomic parameters in users of botulinum toxin and/or facial fillers.
Methods
One hundred forty-five females presented for botulinum toxin and/or soft tissue filler injections completed demographic and standardized psychometric questionnaires such as the World-Health-Organization Quality of Life-Short Form, Big Five Inventory-10, Body Dysmorphic Disorder Questionnaire before treatment.
Results
Patients undergoing injectable aesthetic treatments in an urban dermatology practice were women, middle-aged, highly educated, and mostly employed. Furthermore, participants showed higher quality of life, especially health-related quality of life, and a lower body mass index than controls. Concerning personality traits, our participants scored significantly higher on extraversion, agreeableness, openness to experience, and neuroticism.
Conclusions
This study helps to better understand the psychosocial factors characterizing this patient population. Patients differ from controls by having a higher level of quality of life. No signs of body dysmorphic patterns or problematic personality traits were found.
Level of Evidence IV
This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors
www.springer.com/00266
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Alternative Titles

Full title

Body Image, Personality Traits, and Quality of Life in Botulinum Toxin A and Dermal Filler Patients

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2053210722

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2053210722

Other Identifiers

ISSN

0364-216X

E-ISSN

1432-5241

DOI

10.1007/s00266-018-1165-3

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