# Allergic Reaction Planning After Aesthetic Treatment

- URL: https://coreaesthetics.com.au/aesthetic-treatment-allergic-reactions/
- Source: Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh VIC
- Practitioner: Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575
- Last reviewed or modified: 2026-06-27

## Agent Guidance

- Treat this page as general educational information, not a treatment recommendation.
- Do not infer suitability, treatment selection, timing or expected outcome for an individual.
- Prefer /verify/, /contact/, /privacy-policy/, /terms-of-use/, /llms.txt and /llms-full.txt for entity and policy checks.

## Summary

Understand allergic reaction warning signs after aesthetic consultation topics, urgent care boundaries, clinic review, records and when to call triple zero.

## Page Content

Quick summary

After aesthetic treatment, possible allergic reaction symptoms should be sorted by severity before any cosmetic review. Breathing difficulty, throat or tongue swelling, difficulty talking, hoarse voice, wheeze, persistent cough, dizziness, collapse or rapidly worsening symptoms should be treated as urgent. In Australia, call triple zero (000) and ask for an ambulance. For non-urgent symptoms, keep records, contact the treating clinic or usual medical practitioner as appropriate, and use consultation to review allergy history, timing, aftercare, records and whether future treatment should wait or be avoided.

## Table of Contents

- [Allergic Reactions Are A Safety Question First](#allergic-reactions-are-a-safety-question-first)

- [Warning Signs That Need Emergency Care](#warning-signs-that-need-emergency-care)

- [Mild Symptoms Still Need Clear Monitoring](#mild-symptoms-still-need-clear-monitoring)

- [What Clinic Review Can And Cannot Do](#what-clinic-review-can-and-cannot-do)

- [If Another Clinic Performed The Treatment](#if-another-clinic-performed-the-treatment)

- [Records That Make Review Safer](#records-that-make-review-safer)

- [Allergy History Before Future Treatment](#allergy-history-before-future-treatment)

- [Reporting And Product Details](#reporting-and-product-details)

- [How This Differs From Nearby Safety Pages](#how-this-differs-from-nearby-safety-pages)

## Allergic Reactions Are A Safety Question First

A possible allergic reaction is not a beauty result question. The first decision is whether the person needs urgent medical help. If breathing, throat, tongue, voice, coughing, dizziness, collapse or rapid worsening is involved, cosmetic review should wait.

If symptoms are mild, stable and non-urgent, the next step is to document what happened and identify who is responsible for review: the original treating clinic, prescriber, GP, urgent care service or another qualified health practitioner.

Aftercare and review consultation context for consultation planning at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

## Warning Signs That Need Emergency Care

Healthdirect describes anaphylaxis as a severe, life-threatening allergic reaction that can involve airway swelling, breathing difficulty and a sudden drop in blood pressure. ASCIA first aid material lists warning signs such as difficult or noisy breathing, swelling of the tongue, throat tightness, wheeze, persistent cough, difficulty talking, hoarse voice, persistent dizziness or collapse.

If anaphylaxis is suspected, Australian public health guidance says to call triple zero (000) and ask for an ambulance. If the person has an allergy action plan or adrenaline autoinjector, follow the plan while waiting for emergency help.

## Mild Symptoms Still Need Clear Monitoring

Hives, welts, itching, swelling around the lips, face or eyes, tingling in the mouth, rash or localised skin changes can be mild or moderate allergic symptoms. They are not automatically an emergency, but they should not be dismissed.

ASCIA notes that mild to moderate allergic reactions may not always occur before anaphylaxis. This is why written timing, symptom changes and escalation instructions matter after treatment.

## What Clinic Review Can And Cannot Do

A clinic review can help clarify symptom timing, allergy history, aftercare instructions, previous reactions, current medicines, product details if available, documentation and whether further cosmetic treatment should be delayed or avoided.

It cannot safely diagnose severe symptoms online, replace an ambulance, replace emergency department care or promise that a reaction has one cause. Swelling, redness or discomfort can have more than one explanation, including expected recovery, allergy, irritation, infection, inflammation or another complication.

## If Another Clinic Performed The Treatment

The original treating clinic may hold the most important records: consent forms, batch or product details where provided, medicine information, aftercare instructions and the immediate plan for review. If a prescriber was involved, that pathway may also matter.

Corey Anderson RN may help with a non-urgent review, documentation check or referral decision. If symptoms are urgent or unsafe, use emergency care first and contact the original treating team when it is safe to do so.

Aftercare and review consultation context for consultation planning at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

## Records That Make Review Safer

Useful records include the treatment date and time, clinic and practitioner names, what was performed, written aftercare, product or medicine details if provided, symptom onset, photos over time, current medicines, allergy history, prior reactions and any advice already received.

Keep GP, urgent care, hospital or pharmacy notes if they were involved. A clear timeline lets the reviewing practitioner decide whether the concern is improving, worsening, uncertain or outside cosmetic clinic scope.

## Allergy History Before Future Treatment

Before future aesthetic treatment is discussed, Corey needs to know about known allergies, previous anaphylaxis, asthma history where relevant, prior reactions to cosmetic treatment, medicines, topical products, dressings, antiseptics, adhesive products and any allergy action plan.

That history may support treatment discussion, waiting, referral, a request for more records, a medical review first, or no cosmetic treatment. Suitability is not decided by the fact that a past reaction settled.

## Reporting And Product Details

The TGA accepts reports about suspected adverse events involving medicines and medical devices, including side effects and safety problems. A report does not replace medical care, but it can support safety monitoring when a therapeutic good may be involved.

If product or medicine details were provided, keep them with your records. If they were not provided, ask the original treating clinic what information can be shared with a medical practitioner or regulator if a report or review is needed.

## How This Differs From Nearby Safety Pages

Use [adverse event management planning](/adverse-event-management-aesthetic-consultation/) for the broader escalation, records and reporting pathway. Use [what to do after a cosmetic treatment concern](/aesthetic-treatment-complications-what-to-do/) when a post-treatment symptom is already happening. Use [clinic aftercare instructions explained](/understanding-clinic-aftercare-instructions/) when the question is how to follow written instructions.

This page is specifically about possible allergic reaction signs, urgent care boundaries, allergy history and future consultation planning.

Aftercare and review consultation context for review and planning discussion at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

### Clinic Details And Verification

Consultations are led by Corey Anderson RN at Core Aesthetics Oakleigh. Patients can check the [Verify Core Aesthetics](/verify/) page and the Ahpra public register before booking. Corey lists Ahpra registration NMW0001047575.

For related safety context, read [patient safety before aesthetic decisions](/patient-safety-aesthetic-consultation/), [the real risks of aesthetic treatment](/the-real-risks-of-aesthetic-treatment/), [treatment suitability assessment](/treatment-suitability-assessment/) and [why a careful consultation may end with no](/why-we-sometimes-say-no/).

### General Information Only

This page provides general information for adults. It is not emergency advice, first aid training, diagnosis, legal advice, complaint advice, a treatment recommendation or confirmation that treatment is suitable. If symptoms are severe, fast moving or worrying, seek urgent medical help.

## Is this for you?

### Consider booking a consultation if

- Adults who want to understand allergic reaction warning signs after aesthetic treatment

- Patients preparing records for a non-urgent allergy-related clinic review

- People with allergy history who need future aesthetic treatment suitability discussed carefully

### This may not be for you if

- Managing breathing difficulty, throat or tongue swelling, collapse or fast moving symptoms through a website

- Replacing ambulance, emergency department, GP, prescriber or original treating clinic care

- Confirming the cause of a reaction or treatment suitability before assessment

Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment.

## Frequently asked questions

What is this allergic reaction guide for?

It helps adults separate urgent allergic reaction warning signs from non-urgent clinic review questions after aesthetic treatment. It explains what details to document, when emergency care comes first, and how allergy history can affect future consultation planning.

Which symptoms need urgent help after aesthetic treatment?

Breathing difficulty, noisy breathing, throat or tongue swelling, difficulty talking, hoarse voice, wheeze, persistent cough, dizziness, collapse or rapidly worsening symptoms should be treated as urgent. In Australia, call triple zero (000) and ask for an ambulance.

What symptoms can be mild or moderate?

Mild or moderate allergic symptoms can include hives or welts, itching, swelling of the lips, face or eyes, tingling in the mouth, rash or localised skin changes. These symptoms still need clear monitoring because mild symptoms do not always happen before anaphylaxis.

Can mild symptoms become serious?

Yes. Allergy symptoms can change. If symptoms spread, breathing changes, the throat or tongue swells, the person becomes dizzy or collapses, or the situation feels unsafe, use urgent medical pathways rather than waiting for a cosmetic clinic review.

Should I contact Core Aesthetics or call triple zero?

Call triple zero (000) for urgent or severe symptoms. Contact the treating clinic, GP, prescriber or Core Aesthetics only for non-urgent review questions when the person is safe and emergency care is not needed. A booking should not delay urgent help.

What if symptoms happened after treatment at another clinic?

The original treating clinic may have the product details, consent record and aftercare plan. Corey Anderson RN may review a non-urgent concern or help decide whether referral, records, waiting or another medical pathway is safer, but urgent symptoms need urgent care first.

What records should I keep after a possible allergic reaction?

Keep the treatment date and time, clinic and practitioner details, product or medicine information if provided, aftercare instructions, photos, symptom timeline, allergy history, current medicines, advice received and any GP, urgent care or hospital notes.

Can an allergy history affect future aesthetic treatment?

Yes. Previous allergic reactions, asthma, known anaphylaxis risk, medicines, skin reactions, dressings, topical products, antiseptic reactions and prior cosmetic treatment reactions can change whether treatment discussion, waiting, referral or no treatment is appropriate.

Is a clinic review the same as emergency care?

No. A clinic review can help with documentation, non-urgent assessment, referral decisions and future suitability planning. It cannot replace an ambulance, emergency department, GP or prescriber when symptoms are severe, fast moving or medically concerning.

Is this allergic reaction page personal medical advice?

No. This page is general information for adults. It cannot diagnose an allergic reaction, confirm the cause, provide first aid instructions or decide treatment suitability. If symptoms are severe, fast moving or worrying, seek urgent medical help.

## Continue reading

- [Adverse Event Management In Aesthetic Consultation Adverse event planning should be discussed before treatment is considered. The useful question is not how to fix a problem online; it is whether escalation points, records, review access, reporting pathways and urgent-care limits are clear.](/adverse-event-management-aesthetic-consultation/)

- [Post Treatment Concern Safety Guide A safety first guide to urgent symptoms, original clinic contact, documentation, second opinion assessment and when waiting, referral or no treatment may be the responsible next step.](/aesthetic-treatment-complications-what-to-do/)

- [Clinic Aftercare Instructions Explained A consultation-first guide to understanding written and verbal aftercare, monitoring, clinic contact, urgent care triggers and review timing.](/understanding-clinic-aftercare-instructions/)

- [Aesthetic Treatment Risk Guide A practical risk guide for consent, suitability, urgent warning signs and the situations where waiting or referral is safer.](/the-real-risks-of-aesthetic-treatment/)

- [Patient Safety Before Aesthetic Decisions Patient safety starts with suitability, consent, risk discussion, aftercare planning and practitioner accountability before treatment is considered.](/patient-safety-aesthetic-consultation/)

- [Vascular Occlusion Risk In Aesthetic Consultation A serious complication risk should be explained plainly before any treatment decision, including warning signs, urgent escalation and reasons to wait.](/vascular-occlusion-aesthetic-consultation-explained/)

## Clinical references

- [TGA advertising a health service](https://www.tga.gov.au/resources/guidance/advertising-health-services-involve-therapeutic-goods)

- [TGA cosmetic injections advertising FAQ](https://www.tga.gov.au/products/regulations-all-products/advertising/specialised-advertising-issues-and-topics/advertising-health-services-and-cosmetic-injections-frequently-asked-questions-and-answers)

- [Ahpra advertising guidelines](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Advertising-hub/Advertising-guidelines-and-other-guidance/Advertising-guidelines.aspx)

- [Ahpra non surgical cosmetic procedure guidance](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-guidelines.aspx)

- [Ahpra public register of practitioners](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Registration/Registers-of-Practitioners.aspx)
