Last updated: May 25, 2026
Restylane in Toronto — What the NASHA and OBT hyaluronic acid Actually Does and How We Use It at Bar Beauty Medical
By Basil Russo, Founder — Bar Beauty Medical, 46 Fort York Blvd, CityPlace Toronto Medically reviewed by Dr. John David Henneberry-Fudge MD FRCPC (CPSO #95972), Medical Director
Restylane is a versatile HA filler line ranging from soft lip work to structural cheek and chin support. It’s made by Galderma. At Bar Beauty Medical we carry it because it earns its place in our cabinet — not because the rep brought us pastries. This page explains what’s in the syringe, what we use it for, what it costs, and why it might or might not be the right choice for your face.
Book Your Consult Online → Call 416-923-1200
What exactly is Restylane and what is it made of?
Restylane is built around NASHA and OBT hyaluronic acid. The product line currently available in Canada includes Kysse, Refyne, Defyne, Lyft, Volyme, Skinboosters Vital. Each formulation is engineered for a different use — softer products for lip border and mobile areas, firmer products for structural lift in the cheek and chin, and specialised formulations for specific anatomical zones.
Here’s the part most clinics skip: not every Restylane product is appropriate for every patient or area. The product choice is the most important decision in your treatment plan, and it’s made by your injector at consult based on your anatomy, your skin quality, and what you’re trying to accomplish.
When does Restylane make sense compared to other options at our clinic?
Restylane is in our cabinet alongside Juvéderm, Teosyal RHA, Restylane, Radiesse, and Sculptra. Each has a personality. Shahram, our Master Injector, will pick Restylane when:
- The product’s rheology (the gel’s stiffness and stretch) matches the anatomical demand of your face
- Your skin moves a particular way that favours Restylane’s flow characteristics
- The longevity expectation matches your maintenance schedule
- You’ve responded well to Restylane previously and want the same molecule
We don’t push one brand over another based on margin. We pick the product that fits.
Book Your Consult Online → Call 416-923-1200
How much does Restylane cost at Bar Beauty Medical?
Live pricing as of today, mirrored on /price-list/.
| Product | Price |
|---|---|
| Restylane Kysse | from $625 per syringe |
| Restylane Refyne | from $625 per syringe |
| Restylane Defyne | from $625 per syringe |
| Restylane Lyft | from $625 per syringe |
| Restylane Volyme | from $625 per syringe |
| Restylane Skinboosters Vital | from $625 per syringe |
Series and multi-syringe sessions are discounted on the full price list. We don’t negotiate at the chair. The price you see online is the price you pay.
What does a Restylane appointment look like at Bar Beauty?
- Online intake through Jane before you arrive
- Free consult with Shahram or Jasmine — twenty minutes, photo documentation, treatment plan in writing
- Numbing if you want it — topical, 15 minutes
- Injection — needle for some areas, cannula for others. Injector choice based on what’s safest for the anatomy
- Aftercare card in your hand, follow-up text at 48 hours, free 2-week check if applicable
Standard appointments run 30-45 minutes including numbing.
How long does Restylane actually last?
6-18 months. The honest range. Real-world longevity in our patients varies with:
- Metabolism — younger patients metabolise HA faster
- Movement — mobile areas (lips, perioral) break down filler faster than static areas (cheekbone, chin)
- Product choice — Volbella in lips runs 9-12 months, Voluma in cheeks runs 18-24
- Skincare — well-supported skin holds filler shape longer
- Activity — high-cardio patients metabolise filler faster than sedentary peers
We track all of this in your chart. By your second appointment we know how your face holds product.
Are there any reasons not to choose Restylane?
Yes — and we’ll tell you at consult.
- Active herpes outbreak on the treatment area
- Pregnancy or active breastfeeding
- Allergy to lidocaine or any ingredient in the carrier
- Active autoimmune flare
- Recent dental work in the area within 2 weeks
- Recent vaccination within 2 weeks
- History of granuloma formation
- Recent course of isotretinoin (Accutane) within 6 months
If any of these apply we either wait or recommend a different product.
Who actually injects at Bar Beauty Medical?
Shahram, our Master Injector — advanced injector, non-physician, never addressed as “Dr.” He has trained extensively on Restylane and across the filler categories. Jasmine, our RN injector, runs lip and lower-face filler appointments. All filler decisions and emergency protocols operate under Dr. Henneberry-Fudge’s standing orders. If a vascular event happens, the hyaluronidase protocol is on the counter and the MD is reachable on a dedicated line.
Will Restylane make me look “done” or obvious?
Not if we do it right. The Bar Beauty house style is conservative — small volumes, anatomical respect, natural movement preserved. The compliment most of our patients hear is “you look rested” or “your skin looks great,” not “you look like you had work done.”
We will turn you away if you ask for volume your face doesn’t support. This happens enough that it’s worth saying out loud.
How is Restylane different from other HA fillers at your clinic?
Each filler line has a different rheology — the technical word for how the gel behaves under compression and stretch. Restylane sits at one point on that spectrum. The clinical difference shows up in three places:
- How the filler integrates with tissue over the first 14 days
- How visible the product is in animation versus rest
- How it metabolises over the lifetime of the treatment
We don’t pretend these differences are huge for every patient. For some faces they matter a lot. Your consult tells us which camp you’re in.
What Do Real Restylane Patient Outcomes Look Like?
These are anonymised composites — patterns we see in our chart for Restylane specifically, not specific individuals. Names are made up.
“Sarah,” 33, Restylane first-time patient. Came in researched, knew which product line she wanted, but trusted us to pick the specific formulation for her anatomy. We ran a conservative starting plan with full written documentation of product, lot, and dose. Result was what she’d asked for — subtle, anatomically appropriate, no friend noticed unless she told them. Total first-year spend in the Restylane family: $1,800.
“Michael,” 40, switched to Restylane after a bad result with a different product elsewhere. We dissolved or let the previous work resolve, baselined his face for six weeks, and started fresh with Restylane at conservative volumes. Two years on, he’s our second-year referrer.
“Priya,” 29, Fitzpatrick V skin. Chose Restylane specifically because she’d researched the safety profile across her skin type. We ran a staged plan with photo documentation at every visit, and her result has been stable and reversible-if-needed for the full eighteen months.
“Janet,” 55, returning to injectables after a five-year break. Wanted to look like herself, not the version that the chain spa had created in 2018. We started over with Restylane at conservative doses across a six-month rebuild. Total spend: $3,400. Her photographs from the year are quieter than her photographs from the chain-spa year — in a good way.
Common Misconceptions, Cleared Up
- “More is better.” No. More units, more syringes, more sessions — the over-treated face is the most-recognised face. Restraint is the technique most clinics in Toronto don’t teach.
- “If it’s cheap, it’s bad. If it’s expensive, it’s good.” Wrong both ways. Price tracks rent, marketing spend, and brand position more than it tracks clinical skill. We’ve reversed seven-figure work that came out of Yorkville addresses.
- “I have to commit to a long-term plan today.” No. The first appointment is a single decision. Maintenance schedules are mapped at the second consult, after we see how your face responds.
- “My results will look obvious.” Not if we do it right. The compliment patients hear most often is “you look rested” — not “what did you have done.”
- “I should get the brand my friend got.” Maybe. Maybe not. Anatomy and skin physiology vary. Product choice is your injector’s decision at consult, not a brand-loyalty exercise.
- “Injectables are a slippery slope.” Only if no one is screening for that. Dr. Henneberry-Fudge’s BDD protocol is built specifically to identify the patient pattern where treatment will not help — and we say no.
What’s the Pre-Treatment Checklist We Send Every Patient?
Three days before your appointment you’ll get a text from Jane App with the pre-treatment checklist. We send it because the patients who follow it have measurably better outcomes and lower rates of bruising, swelling, and post-treatment frustration. Here’s the full version.
Five days out
- Stop fish oil, omega-3, vitamin E, ginkgo, and high-dose turmeric supplements. All thin the blood and increase bruising risk.
- Stop ibuprofen, naproxen, and aspirin unless prescribed by a physician for a cardiac or stroke indication — in which case we adjust the plan rather than the medication.
- If you drink heavily on weekends, dial it back. Alcohol the night before an injection appointment adds 30-40% to your bruise risk in our chart audit.
Forty-eight hours out
- No new active skincare. If you’re starting tretinoin, glycolic acid, or a strong retinoid, push the start date until after treatment.
- Sleep. Tired patients bruise more, tolerate needles worse, and second-guess results harder.
The morning of
- Eat. Most fainting events in any aesthetic clinic are vasovagal — empty stomach plus needle plus nerves. A real breakfast cuts the risk to near zero.
- Hydrate. Two glasses of water on top of your usual.
- Skip caffeine if you can. Coffee plus adrenaline plus needle is a recipe for elevated blood pressure during treatment, which means more bruising.
- Wear something with a collar that won’t drag across the treatment area when you take it off later.
At the clinic
- Wash your face on arrival — we have a sink. Makeup increases infection risk on any broken-skin treatment.
- Tell us if anything changed since your intake. New medication, new diagnosis, new pregnancy — all change the plan.
- Bring your phone charger. Some sessions run longer than you expect.
The patients who treat the checklist as optional are the patients who text us 48 hours later asking why they bruised. The patients who follow it tend to be the ones who refer their friends.
How do I book?
Book online on Jane anytime. Or call 416-923-1200. Free consults, no obligation, written treatment plan in your hand before any injection.
Book Your Consult Online → Call 416-923-1200 Meet Our Medical Director → Meet The Team → View Full Price List →
FAQ — Patient Questions We Hear Most Often
How much does Restylane cost at Bar Beauty?
From $625 per syringe. Full price list at /price-list/.
How long does Restylane last?
6-18 months. Varies by area, metabolism, and product within the Restylane line.
Does Restylane hurt?
Most areas are tolerable with topical numbing. Lips are the most sensitive area and we offer dental block in addition to topical for lip-specific work.
Can Restylane be dissolved if I don’t like the result?
If it’s HA-based, yes — hyaluronidase reverses HA filler. Non-HA biostimulators like Sculptra and Radiesse are not dissolvable; they wear off over their natural lifespan.
How soon can I see Restylane results?
HA fillers show shape immediately. Final settled result is 14 days post-injection.
What’s the swelling like after Restylane?
Lips swell most — 24-72 hours of visible puffiness. Cheek and chin areas have less obvious swelling, typically resolved by 48 hours.
Can I exercise after my Restylane appointment?
Light activity yes, hot yoga or heavy cardio no for 24-48 hours.
Will Restylane migrate?
Improperly placed filler can migrate. Properly placed filler from a trained injector stays where it’s placed for the lifespan of the product.
How does Restylane compare to Botox?
Different category. Filler adds volume and shape. Botox relaxes muscles. Many of our patients use both.
Is Restylane permanent?
No. HA fillers metabolise. Biostimulators rebuild collagen and the collagen response lasts longer than the carrier.
Can I combine Restylane with Aerolase or Morpheus 8?
Yes, with timing. We typically do laser before filler, or wait 2 weeks after filler before laser in the same anatomical area.
Do you offer Restylane consultations at no cost?
Yes. Book a free consult on Jane or call 416-923-1200.
What does long-term use of Restylane look like in our chair?
We don’t sell single appointments. Patients who do well with Restylane long-term are on a 12-month programme that combines this product with sensible maintenance and the right combination of other modalities. A typical Bar Beauty Restylane patient’s year:
- Months 1-2: First treatment, photographs, second visit at the 4-week mark for touch-up
- Months 3-6: Settled result, optional pairing with Aerolase or Morpheus 8 for skin quality
- Months 9-12: Maintenance dose to extend the result, mapped at consult
- Daily: Medical-grade skincare, mineral SPF 50, no over-the-counter “filler-dissolving” gimmicks
- Quarterly: Photo review with Shahram or Jasmine
The patients who treat aesthetic medicine as a continuous practice rather than a series of emergencies get visibly better results.
How does Restylane fit alongside the other treatments at Bar Beauty?
The whole point of a multi-product cabinet is that one product is rarely the answer for a real face. The Bar Beauty house approach combines:
- Restylane for the specific anatomical role it’s best at
- A complementary HA filler line where Restylane’s rheology isn’t the right fit
- Botox / Dysport / Nuceiva / Xeomin for the dynamic component
- A biostimulator (Sculptra or Radiesse) for collagen scaffolding
- Aerolase and Morpheus 8 for skin quality
- Medical-grade skincare and daily mineral SPF
Most Bar Beauty patients use three to five of these in combination across a year. The consult is where we plan the calendar.
Why does the product choice matter so much within the Restylane line?
Each formulation within Restylane has a different rheology — the technical word for how the gel behaves under compression and stretch. The thinner products integrate beautifully into mobile areas like the lip vermillion but won’t structurally support a chin projection. The firmer products provide architectural lift in the cheek bone but would read lumpy in a thin-tissue area.
The product choice is the most important decision in your treatment plan. It’s made by your injector at consult based on your anatomy, your skin quality, your tissue characteristics, and what you’re trying to accomplish. We carry the full Restylane range so the choice can be made on clinical grounds — not on what we happen to have on the shelf.
What does the Restylane clinical research actually support?
Each Restylane product is Health Canada approved with documented safety and efficacy data in its on-label indication. The peer-reviewed literature consistently supports the molecule in the use cases we offer at Bar Beauty. Dr. Henneberry-Fudge reviews new clinical evidence as it emerges and our protocols update when warranted.
We will not use Restylane in an off-label indication unless the evidence base supports it and your consent is explicit. Common off-label uses (e.g. tear-trough work) are discussed in detail at consult, and we’ll tell you when the on-label choice is better.
Is this treatment safe for darker skin tones (Fitzpatrick IV-VI)?
For most of what we offer, yes. Aerolase NeoElite at 1064 nm is genuinely safe across all phototypes and is our default for vascular and pigment work in darker skin. Injectables (toxin and HA filler) are equally safe across phototypes. Morpheus 8 carries a small post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation risk in Fitzpatrick V-VI that we mitigate with conservative energy settings and prophylactic topical lightening under Dr. Henneberry-Fudge’s prescription where appropriate.
Can I do this while breastfeeding?
Generally no for injectables, with rare exceptions discussed with Dr. Henneberry-Fudge. The published safety data in breastfeeding is sparse, and the Canadian medical aesthetic community defaults to deferral. Most patients return to treatment three to six months after weaning. Laser treatments and most facials are fine throughout nursing.
How does this compare to Yorkville pricing at twice the price?
In most cases the product is identical, the training is comparable, and the differential is rent, location, and brand premium — not clinical skill. We’ve corrected enough work from Yorkville addresses to know that price does not track outcome reliably. We publish prices because the patient deserves to know what they’re paying for.
Can I get this treatment if I’m on Ozempic or another GLP-1 medication?
Yes, but planning matters. Significant weight loss redistributes facial fat over six to twelve months. We tend to stage filler and biostimulator decisions for patients in active weight loss and revisit at every visit. Toxin and laser work are unaffected by GLP-1 status.
Will I look “done” when I go back to work the next day?
Not if we do it right. The Bar Beauty house style is restrained — small doses, conservative volumes, natural movement preserved. The most common compliment patients hear at the office the next day is “you look rested” or “did you sleep well this weekend.” Visible swelling on day one is normal; visible artifice in week two means the dose was wrong.
IMAGE BUDGET (30 images)
- [Product Lineup] Restylane product family vials/syringes arranged on white background — Alt: Restylane product lineup Toronto
- [Product Detail] Restylane syringe label closeup showing lot number and expiry — Alt: Restylane authentic packaging detail Toronto
- [Injection Technique] Cannula injection of Restylane in mid-cheek, sterile field — Alt: Restylane cannula injection Toronto
- [Injection Technique] Needle injection of Restylane in lip border, pinch technique — Alt: Restylane lip injection technique Toronto
- [Anatomy Diagram] Mid-face anatomical map showing safe Restylane placement zones — Alt: Restylane mid-face anatomy injection map
- [Anatomy Diagram] Lip anatomy with vermillion border and wet-dry junction marked — Alt: Lip anatomy Restylane injection Toronto
- [Before/After] Lip filler before-and-after, single syringe Restylane, 14-day — Alt: Restylane lip filler before after Toronto
- [Before/After] Cheek filler before-and-after, two syringes Restylane, 30-day — Alt: Restylane cheek filler before after Toronto
- [Before/After] Chin and jawline contouring before-and-after with Restylane — Alt: Restylane jawline before after Toronto
- [Before/After] Under-eye/tear trough before-and-after with conservative Restylane — Alt: Restylane tear trough before after Toronto
- [Comparison Chart] Restylane vs other HA fillers — rheology, longevity, ideal area — Alt: Restylane comparison chart filler Toronto
- [Comparison Chart] Restylane rheology G-prime and cohesivity infographic — Alt: Restylane G prime cohesivity chart
- [Timeline Chart] Restylane settled result timeline day 0 to day 14 — Alt: Restylane 14 day timeline result
- [Pricing Table] Bar Beauty Restylane price snapshot — Alt: Restylane price list Bar Beauty Toronto
- [Clinic Environment] Filler treatment room with adjustable chair and product cabinet — Alt: Restylane treatment room Bar Beauty
- [Clinic Environment] Product fridge with Health Canada approved fillers — Alt: Health Canada approved filler fridge Bar Beauty
- [Injector Portrait] Shahram Master Injector holding a Restylane syringe — Alt: Shahram Master Injector Restylane Toronto
- [Injector Portrait] Jasmine RN injector at consultation with patient — Alt: Jasmine RN injector Restylane Toronto
- [Medical Director] Dr. Henneberry-Fudge in lab coat, signage with CPSO number — Alt: Dr Henneberry-Fudge Medical Director Bar Beauty
- [Patient Lifestyle] Patient post-treatment selfie with natural lighting — Alt: Patient post Restylane selfie Toronto
- [Infographic] Pre-Restylane preparation checklist — Alt: Pre-Restylane preparation checklist
- [Infographic] Post-Restylane aftercare card 48-hour timeline — Alt: Post-Restylane aftercare 48 hour
- [Safety] Hyaluronidase vial and emergency protocol kit on counter — Alt: Hyaluronidase emergency kit Toronto filler
- [Reviews] 5-star Google reviews 166+ rating widget — Alt: Bar Beauty Medical Google reviews
- [Map] Driving map to 46 Fort York Blvd CityPlace — Alt: Bar Beauty Medical CityPlace map
- [Parking] Free on-site parking lot near clinic entrance — Alt: Bar Beauty Medical free parking
- [Brand] Bar Beauty Medical logo at clinic entry — Alt: Bar Beauty Medical brand entrance
- [Before/After] Conservative pan-facial harmonisation with Restylane — Alt: Pan-facial Restylane before after Toronto
- [Product Education] Restylane package insert held in gloved hands — Alt: Restylane insert education Toronto
- [Sterility] Sterile field with gloves, gauze, alcohol prep, sharps container — Alt: Sterile field filler Bar Beauty Toronto


