Three products, separate labeling
Botox Cosmetic, Dysport and Jeuveau are brand-name prescription products. Each has a different formulation, approved indications, preparation instructions and dosing language.
That is why a statement such as “this many units of one equals this many of another” is not a safe universal rule. A qualified clinician follows the relevant labeling and uses clinical judgment for the individual.
What influences product choice
A consultation considers the area being discussed, facial movement, muscle strength, previous experience, desired degree of movement, relevant medical history and product-specific factors.
Some aesthetic applications discussed online may be off-label. Off-label use can be lawful medical practice, but it should be clearly explained and individually consented to—not presented as an approved use.
Onset, duration and follow-up
People often ask which product starts fastest or lasts longest. Individual response varies, and broad marketing comparisons can overstate predictable differences. Follow the timeline and aftercare information for the product actually used.
A follow-up should assess your response rather than compare it with a friend or an influencer. Contact the treating practice about unexpected symptoms.
Questions to ask
Ask which product is being recommended, why it fits the proposed area, whether the use is on-label or off-label, what risks apply, what follow-up is offered and what alternatives exist.
This article is educational and does not recommend a particular product or treatment.
Educational notice: This page provides general information and is not medical advice. Treatment recommendations and eligibility require an individual consultation.