Most aesthetic planning focuses on the face. The body tends to be an afterthought, addressed separately or not at all.
At TAE, several of our most requested treatments work across both, and there is a strong case for planning them together rather than treating them as two different conversations.
Mesotherapy Skin Needling
Skin needling is most commonly associated with the face, but its application extends well beyond it. At TAE, mesotherapy is used on the face, neck, chest and hands, four areas that age at a similar rate and are exposed to comparable levels of UV over a lifetime, yet are rarely treated with the same consistency.
The hands and chest in particular are often overlooked entirely. Skin needling supports overall skin renewal, texture and tone by creating controlled micro channels in the dermis, encouraging the skin's natural repair response.
Treating these areas alongside the face produces a more cohesive result across visible skin rather than an obvious contrast between a well maintained face and an untreated neckline or hands.

LaseMD
LaseMD's versatility is one of its more clinically useful features. Beyond facial use for pigmentation, tone and texture, it is also used on the body for similar concerns, and increasingly for scalp application to support hair density and growth.
For clients managing pigmentation or textural concerns across multiple areas, or those exploring non-surgical options for hair density, LaseMD offers a single modality that adapts to several different applications depending on the area and goal.
Ultraformer MPT
Skin laxity is not confined to the face and neck. The stomach and arms are two of the more common body areas raised in consultation, particularly following significant weight change or the postpartum period.
Ultraformer MPT works the same way on the body as it does on the face, delivering focused ultrasound energy beneath the skin's surface to support tightening and structural integrity where laxity has developed. Treating the stomach or arms follows the same principle as treating the face. Assessment first, then a course of treatment tailored to the tissue present.

Sclerotherapy
Visible veins on the legs are common and rarely discussed openly, despite how frequently they come up in consultation. Sclerotherapy treats spider veins and small varicose veins directly, using a fine needle to inject a solution that causes the affected vessel to collapse and fade over time.
It is a targeted, clinically established treatment, and one worth considering alongside any broader body-focused treatment plan.
Planning Across Face and Body
There is no reason facial treatment planning should happen on a different timeline to body treatment planning. Many of these treatments work in courses, and starting them together means the maths and the timeline align more sensibly than treating them as separate decisions made months apart.
A consultation is the place to map out what is appropriate for you, across both face and body.
All treatments require a consultation to assess suitability. Individual responses may vary. This content is for educational purposes only.
