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Jaw Muscle Treatment: How Many Units?

The dose for jaw muscle treatment at Core Aesthetics is determined by individual assessment of jaw muscle bulk, strength and the presenting concern, whether aesthetic jaw slimming, teeth grinding r

Quick summary

The dose for jaw muscle treatment at Core Aesthetics is determined by individual assessment of jaw muscle bulk, strength and the presenting concern, whether aesthetic jaw slimming, teeth grinding relief or both.

Jaw muscle treatment dosing is one of the most individually variable aspects of wrinkle injectable treatment, and for good reason. The jaw muscle varies enormously in size and strength between individuals. At Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh, Corey Anderson, AHPRA registered nurse, determines the appropriate dose through direct assessment of each client’s jaw muscle at consultation, not through a standard protocol.

Why Dose Varies Between Individuals

The jaw muscle is the primary chewing muscle at the jaw angle. Its size and strength vary significantly between clients. Some people have naturally large jaw muscles, either from genetic factors, from habitual clenching, from teeth grinding or from a diet heavy in very firm foods. Others have modestly sized jaw muscles that are proportionate to their jaw architecture. The dose required to produce a meaningful clinical effect in a large, strong jaw muscle is substantially higher than the dose appropriate for a smaller one.

A standard dose applied to all clients regardless of muscle size will either undertreat larger muscles or overtreat smaller ones. Individual assessment removes this problem by calibrating the dose to the anatomy.

What the Assessment Involves

At your jaw muscle slimming consultation, Corey Anderson will assess the jaw muscle directly by palpating the jaw angle while you clench and at rest. This allows him to determine the volume and contractile strength of the muscle. He will also assess whether the jaw width concern is primarily muscular or primarily skeletal, wrinkle treatment addresses the muscular component only, and this distinction matters significantly for predicting the outcome of treatment.

The assessment also determines whether the primary goal is aesthetic jaw slimming, functional relief from teeth grinding and jaw tension, or both. These goals may require different doses and may be approached differently in terms of placement and timing. Read more about jaw muscle treatment at Core Aesthetics.

What to Expect Over Successive Treatments

Jaw muscle treatment produces its most significant jaw width reduction over successive treatments rather than in a single session. As the muscle is repeatedly treated, its bulk gradually reduces as it adapts to lower activity. Many clients find that the dose required decreases over time as the muscle reduces and that the duration between treatments extends as the muscle becomes less reactive. The first treatment establishes the baseline response and informs the dosing approach for subsequent appointments.

For clients primarily seeking teeth grinding and jaw tension relief, the functional benefit is typically apparent earlier and more immediately than the visible aesthetic reduction in jaw width.

Booking Your Jaw Muscle Slimming Consultation

Core Aesthetics is at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. Book online at any time or call 0491 706 705. Read more about the jaw muscle slimming consultation process at Core Aesthetics.

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Related: Read more about jaw muscle treatment at Core Aesthetics and book a consultation at Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh.

General Information Only. This article is general in nature and does not replace a consultation with a qualified health practitioner. Treatment outcomes, suitability and risks vary by individual. Any medical or prescription treatment options can only be discussed and provided where clinically appropriate following an individual assessment.

Clinical References

  • AHPRA: Guidelines for nonsurgical cosmetic procedures
  • TGA: Regulation of aesthetic treatments in Australia

Safety, Suitability and Clinical Assessment

All aesthetic treatment procedures carry risk. The suitability assessment at consultation identifies any contraindications or relative risk factors specific to your circumstances, including medical history, current medications, previous procedures, and anatomical features that may affect the risk profile for a given treatment area. This information is reviewed before any treatment is planned.

For certain conditions and medications, injectable treatments are not appropriate, or require modification of technique or timing. For others, the treating practitioner may recommend that you consult with your primary healthcare provider before proceeding. These are clinical judgements that can only be made with accurate, complete medical history information, which is why the consultation history taking process is thorough.

Complication recognition and initial management are part of the clinical competency required of practitioners performing injectable treatments under AHPRA’s September 2025 guidelines for nonsurgical cosmetic procedures. The practitioner at Core Aesthetics holds current training in this area and maintains the relevant management supplies on site. Understanding that risk exists and is actively managed is more useful than assuming risk does not exist.

Review Appointments and Ongoing Care

A review appointment at four to six weeks is a standard part of every treatment cycle at Core Aesthetics. The review is not contingent on whether you have concerns, it is a clinical standard that applies to every patient. At review, the practitioner assesses the result across all treated areas, compares the outcome to the pretreatment clinical photographs, identifies any asymmetry or variation in response between sides, and determines whether any adjustment is appropriate within the same treatment cycle.

The review is also where longitudinal data about how your specific anatomy responds to treatment is recorded. Over multiple treatment cycles, this accumulated data allows the practitioner to refine the dosing and approach to better match your individual response pattern, which is one of the most significant advantages of maintaining a consistent treating practitioner rather than moving between clinics.

If you have any concerns in the period between your treatment and your review appointment, contact the clinic directly. The practitioner who treated you has the clinical context to respond accurately to any post treatment question, which is preferable to relying on general online information that may not reflect your specific situation.

What the Assessment Covers

The assessment at the consultation appointment is a face wide evaluation, not a focused review of only the area you have identified as a concern. This full face approach is deliberate: anatomical features interact with each other, and addressing one area in isolation, without understanding the broader facial context, can produce results that look disproportionate even when the individual area was technically treated well.

The practitioner evaluates facial symmetry, bone structure, soft tissue distribution, skin quality, and the dynamic movement patterns associated with each treatment area. The history taking covers your current medications, any previous injectable or surgical procedures, relevant health conditions, and any prior reactions or complications. From this assessment, the practitioner develops a treatment plan that reflects your specific anatomy and circumstances.

Results vary between individuals. What the assessment finds in one patient may be different from what it finds in another patient with a similar presenting concern, which is why templated treatment protocols are not used here. All treatments at Core Aesthetics are consultation based and individually assessed.

The Long-Term Approach

Most patients who pursue aesthetic treatment are thinking about the long term, even when they are not sure how to articulate that. The question is not just “what can I have done today” but “how do I age well over the next decade”. Those are different questions, and they require different conversations.

At Core Aesthetics, the planning conversation is oriented towards the long term. What does gradual maintenance look like over several years? Which areas are the highest priority given current changes? When should treatment begin, and when is it appropriate to wait? What is the realistic trajectory if treatment is maintained consistently versus started later?

These questions are best answered in the context of an individual assessment, because the answers depend on anatomy, rate of change, starting point, and personal goals, all of which vary. The consultation is where that conversation happens. Results vary between individuals, and a long term plan reflects that variability rather than applying a standard approach.

About This Information

The information on this page is provided for general educational purposes. It is not a substitute for clinical advice and does not constitute a recommendation that you proceed with any particular treatment. Aesthetic treatments are prescription medical procedures. They carry risks that vary between individuals and that must be assessed and discussed in a clinical context before any treatment decision is made.

At Core Aesthetics, Corey Anderson assesses every patient individually. The consultation is the point at which your specific anatomy, medical history, and goals are evaluated together. No treatment is offered at a first appointment, and no treatment is appropriate for everyone. This page is a starting point, a way to understand what is involved before you decide whether a consultation is the right next step for you.

If you have questions about anything on this page or about whether treatment might be appropriate for your situation, you are welcome to call the clinic or book a consultation at no obligation.

This page provides clinical information about Jaw Muscle Treatment: How Many Units?. It is intended for adults aged 18 and over who are considering aesthetic treatment and want to understand the clinical process, suitability factors, and what to expect from a consultation based practice. All treatment decisions at Core Aesthetics follow individual assessment, no treatment is offered at a first appointment without a separate consultation. Results vary between individuals and are reviewed at follow up.

Clinical accountability and how this page is reviewed

The clinical content in “Jaw Muscle Treatment: How Many Units?” is written and reviewed by Corey Anderson, AHPRA registered nurse (NMW0001047575). Core Aesthetics operates as a one practitioner, consultation based, low volume clinic in Oakleigh, Melbourne, which means every recommendation on this page reflects the same clinical perspective rather than a copywriter’s interpretation of it. Results vary between individuals, and any guidance written for the general reader has to acknowledge that variance, what the published evidence supports for the average patient may not be what the assessment supports for a specific patient.

Specific to jaw muscle treatment how many units: this page describes the typical clinical picture for a healthy adult patient at the time of writing. Individual circumstances, medical history, current medications, prior cosmetic treatment, skin type, age, hormonal state, lifestyle, can shift any of the timelines and recommendations described here. The information is provided to help patients arrive at consultation already familiar with the underlying clinical reasoning, not to replace the consultation itself. Results vary between individuals; this page describes the centre of the distribution, not the edges. The jaw muscle slimming treatment page covers an adjacent topic in more depth.

Patients reading this page who want to verify Corey Anderson’s AHPRA registration can do so directly on the AHPRA public register at ahpra.gov.au using registration number NMW0001047575. The Core Aesthetics clinic operates from 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166, Tuesday to Saturday, by consultation appointment. All new patient treatment at Core Aesthetics follows a structured clinical consultation, consistent with the September 2025 AHPRA cosmetic procedures guidelines. Treatment may be scheduled for the same day as consultation or at a subsequent appointment, depending on clinical assessment and individual circumstances. Patients with questions about the content on this page can raise them at consultation; the practitioner is happy to walk through any clinical reasoning that the written content does not fully capture. Results vary between individuals, and the consultation is the appropriate place to discuss what those individual variations mean for a specific person’s treatment plan.

One closing point worth making: the content on this page is intended to inform the consultation rather than replace it. Patients arrive at consultation with different baseline knowledge, different goals, and different prior experiences with cosmetic treatment, and the consultation is calibrated to the individual rather than to the average reader of this page. The written content does its job if it helps the patient ask better questions and understand the answers they receive. Patients researching the topic in more depth may find the patient safety aesthetic treatments page and the consultation guide Melbourne page useful as further reading; both are written and reviewed under the same clinical accountability framework as this page.

Is this for you?

Consider booking a consultation if

  • You are 18 or older and in good general health
  • You are researching aesthetic treatments and want a clinical assessment of your options
  • You prefer a one practitioner, consultation based environment
  • You understand that treatment decisions are made individually, not based on a standard menu

This may not be for you if

  • You are pregnant, trying to conceive, or breastfeeding
  • You have an active skin infection or unhealed wound in a potential treatment area
  • You are under 18 years of age

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

Frequently asked questions

What does jaw muscle treatment address for clients from Treatment How Many Units?

Jaw muscle treatment addresses jaw muscle activity for cosmetic (lower face contour) or clinical (bruxism, jaw clenching) purposes. The clinical approach is the same for clients from Treatment How Many Units as for any other suburb, individual assessment determines what is appropriate for the client’s specific anatomy and goals. Results vary between individuals.

How long do jaw muscle treatment results typically last for Treatment How Many Units clients?

Jaw muscle treatment results typically settle for between four and six months in most clients, regardless of suburb. Individual response, dose, and treatment area affect duration. Retreatment intervals are reviewed at follow up rather than scheduled in advance.

What recovery should Treatment How Many Units clients plan for after jaw muscle treatment?

After jaw muscle treatment, no functional restriction the same day; mild tenderness at injection points for a few hours. Most Treatment How Many Units clients return to normal activities the same day. Detailed aftercare specific to the treated area is provided at the appointment, and any concerns can be raised by phone or email afterward.

How do Treatment How Many Units clients reach the clinic for jaw muscle treatment appointments?

From Treatment How Many Units, Core Aesthetics at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh sits within the broader south east Melbourne catchment, most easily reached by car. Oakleigh railway station is within walking distance of the clinic. Open Tuesday to Saturday by appointment.

How long should Treatment How Many Units clients allow for a jaw muscle treatment appointment journey?

Travel time from Treatment How Many Units to Oakleigh varies based on origin point and traffic. The clinic is in the south east Melbourne catchment and is most easily reached by car for clients further out. Allow extra time during peak periods.

Does Core Aesthetics regularly see Treatment How Many Units clients for jaw muscle treatment?

Yes, Treatment How Many Units is within the south east Melbourne catchment Core Aesthetics serves. Every jaw muscle treatment consultation and treatment is conducted by Corey Anderson, AHPRA registered nurse. Results vary between individuals.

Who writes and reviews the clinical content on this page?

The clinical content is written and reviewed by Corey Anderson, an AHPRA registered nurse (NMW0001047575) and the practitioner at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh, Melbourne. Core Aesthetics operates as a one practitioner, consultation based, low volume clinic, which means the recommendations on this page reflect the same clinical perspective patients encounter at the consultation itself. Results vary between individuals, and personalised guidance is provided at consultation.

Where is the clinic located?

Core Aesthetics is at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. The clinic is reachable from across south east Melbourne, with parking on Atherton Road and surrounding streets. Oakleigh station is a short walk from the clinic on the Cranbourne and Pakenham lines.

Should I consider jaw muscle treatment if my jaw aches but I am not concerned about its appearance?

Jaw muscle treatment is a prescription injectable treatment. Whether it is appropriate for jaw ache, teeth grinding or bruxism-related discomfort depends on the clinical picture, including jaw anatomy, bite pattern and whether other contributors have been ruled out. A consultation is the appropriate starting point, and treatment would only be recommended if clinically suitable.

Is it safe to have jaw muscle treatment more than once?

Repeated prescription neuromodulator treatment to the jaw muscle is generally considered clinically safe when doses are conservative and intervals are appropriate. Over time, reduced muscle activity can lead to gradual reduction in muscle bulk. The clinical implications of this are assessed at each review, and long-term treatment planning should account for cumulative effect.

Why does jaw muscle treatment take longer to show visible change than other wrinkle treatments?

The jaw muscle is a large, dense muscle, and prescription neuromodulator reduces its bulk gradually through reduced activity over several months. Visible changes to the lower face typically take two to four months after each treatment session, with the full effect becoming apparent after two or more treatment cycles.

Clinical references

  1. TGA: Regulation of aesthetic treatments in Australia
  2. AHPRA: Guidelines for registered health practitioners in cosmetic procedures
  3. ACCSM: Public information for patients

Written and reviewed by Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575 · Reviewed April 2026 · TGA & AHPRA compliant

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