Kylie Jenner, 26, Trolled For Looking ‘in her 40s’, After Getting Filler Done

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Fans focused on Kylie Jenner’s face because it lacked a strong contour coating when she wore it for the first time, at the Jean Paul Gaultier show during Paris Fashion Week in January.

Additionally, the beauty mogul sobbed in the most recent episode of Keeping Up With the Kardashians as she recalled how online users had said that she was “in her 40s” due to her natural makeup in the photos.

It particularly hurt Kylie, who has adamantly denied having fillers, that fans and experts thought she had gotten too much under her eyes and over her cheekbones. What did Kylie Jenner do to her face, someone maliciously questioned? She may only be 26 years old, but she sure seems that way in this photo.

Another added, “We’re seeing in real time what long-term filler usage does as you age,” in a comment that was watched 25 million times. Riffing off this, someone said it was ‘crazy’ that these injections had ‘ruined’ her youth.

Hollywood actress Kylie, who is currently dating Timothée Chalamet, has vehemently denied ever having filler, claiming to have “never touched my face” in an interview with the Wall Street Journal last year.

However, in 2015, following several months of fervent online conjecture, Kylie acknowledged using lip-plumping injections and disclosed that her small lips were a personal insecurity. Although there isn’t any evidence that Kylie has used the “tweakment,” anyone who uses filler to try to stop time from passing should exercise caution.

These fillers, which are usually collagen or hyaluronic acid injections, can be purchased in cosmetic clinics for as low as £75. They are meant to have effects that last up to eighteen months, either by reducing wrinkles or adding volume.

However, younger people may have the opposite impact and appear older than they are. According to her, dermal fillers were first intended to replace lost volume in aged faces. It can frequently look odd when they are utilised to alter or increase younger people’s natural features.

“This appears somewhat inappropriate and out of place to our eyes, much like when we see heavy makeup on young children,” the person said. “Whether there are long-term effects from having dermal filler from a very young age is still unknown,” she continued.

Nonetheless, I believe we are beginning to witness a true distortion in the standards of the ideal face proportion as fillers grow more popular among young people. “When applied correctly, dermal fillers are a great treatment, but it’s crucial to use them carefully.”

According to Dr Emma Craythorne, a fellow consultant dermatologist and member of the British Cosmetic Dermatology Group, “issues arise whenever fairly large amounts of filler are being used.”

They used to say these fillers would dissolve and the body would absorb them, meaning you wouldn’t have them after six, nine, or a year, she told MailOnline. However, three, four, or five years after they have had filler, I still find fillers in my patients’ MRI scans. “Have you had filler here?” I’ll ask a patient while I operate to remove skin cancer. Then they declare, “It’s been ten years since I had filler.” But it remains in place. It’s visible in the skin.

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