# What Should You Do After Tear Trough Treatment?

- URL: https://coreaesthetics.com.au/tear-trough-aftercare-guide/
- Source: Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh VIC
- Practitioner: Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575
- Last reviewed or modified: 2026-06-22

## 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

Tear Trough Aftercare Guide: assessment led guidance on suitability, risks, consent, timing, alternatives and when to pause before booking.

## Page Content

Quick summary

This guide explains under eye and tear trough assessment for adults deciding whether to book a consultation. It separates the immediate question from wider treatment decisions, outlines what information to bring, and explains why Corey Anderson RN may recommend treatment discussion, waiting, referral or no cosmetic treatment after individual assessment and consent.

## Table of Contents

- [What Is This Guide Answering?](#what-is-this-guide-answering)

- [Where Does This Fit?](#where-does-this-fit)

- [How Is This Different From A Related Guide?](#how-is-this-different-from-a-related-guide)

- [What Should Be Clarified First?](#what-should-be-clarified-first)

- [What Should I Ask Corey?](#what-should-i-ask-corey)

- [When Could Waiting Be Safer?](#when-could-waiting-be-safer)

- [What Are The Safety Limits?](#what-are-the-safety-limits)

- [Why Do Personal Instructions Come First?](#why-do-personal-instructions-come-first)

- [Why Is Under Eye Aftercare Different?](#why-is-under-eye-aftercare-different)

- [Which Aftercare Questions Matter Most?](#which-aftercare-questions-matter-most)

## What Is This Guide Answering?

This guide answers a specific reader question: a focused guide for under eye and tear trough assessment, with a narrower role than the main treatment or consultation guide.

It helps the reader understand what to ask in consultation, what information to bring, when waiting or referral may be safer and when a main treatment or consultation guide is the better place to continue reading.

## Where Does This Fit?

The focus here is under eye and tear trough assessment. It should not try to answer every cosmetic treatment term or every local consultation question.

A narrower guide is useful when it gives a direct answer, sets a safety frame, and helps you choose the next page or appointment pathway without feeling pushed toward a treatment decision.

Under-eye consultation assessment 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.

## How Is This Different From A Related Guide?

A related guide is [Lip Treatment Aftercare Guide](/lip-treatment-aftercare-guide/). Read this page when your question matches this topic; use the related guide when its wording is closer to the concern, area or appointment decision you are trying to clarify.

If a reader is comparing both pages, the deciding factor should be the question they are asking, not repeated wording. The safer pathway is assessment first, then treatment discussion only if clinically appropriate.

## What Should Be Clarified First?

Use this as a preparation checklist. It is general information only and does not decide suitability.

Question
Why it matters
Possible next step

What is the exact concern?
The same visible concern can come from anatomy, movement, skin quality, previous treatment, timing or expectations.
Corey may narrow the consultation to a specific area or explain that another page is a better starting point.

Is there a health or safety boundary?
Symptoms, medicines, allergies, pregnancy or breastfeeding status, prior reactions and recent procedures can change the discussion.
Waiting, referral or no treatment may be safer.

Is the decision being rushed?
Events, social pressure, fear of ageing, comparison photos or a near-me search can compress consent.
The consultation may be used for questions only.

What does review access look like?
Aftercare and review planning are part of a responsible pathway.
Treatment discussion should wait if follow up is not realistic.

Under-eye consultation assessment 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.

## What Should I Ask Corey?

Ask what appears to be driving the concern, what remains uncertain, what risks are relevant, what alternatives exist and what would make waiting the better choice.

Also ask which appointment pathway best matches your concern. A focused guide should make the next step clearer, not pressure the reader into a treatment decision.

Under-eye consultation assessment 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.

## When Could Waiting Be Safer?

Waiting may be safer when timing is poor, an event is very close, health information is incomplete, expectations are unsettled, symptoms need medical review or follow up would be difficult.

It can also be appropriate to use the appointment for education only. Booking a consultation does not mean treatment will be recommended or that it needs to happen on the same day.

## What Are The Safety Limits?

Relevant risks and limits depend on the area, health history and pathway discussed. They can include bruising, swelling, tenderness, asymmetry, dissatisfaction, delayed issues, altered expression or balance and rare but serious complications that require urgent review.

Consent should include alternatives, costs, aftercare, review access, uncertainty and the option of doing nothing. A consultation is not an obligation to proceed.

## Why Do Personal Instructions Come First?

This page is general education for adults who have had, or are preparing for, tear trough treatment at Core Aesthetics. It does not replace the written or verbal instructions Corey gives after assessing an individual patient.

Aftercare can change with anatomy, medical history, medicines, skin condition, previous treatment, swelling pattern, travel, eye care, dental work and the plan discussed on the day. If your personal instructions differ from this page, follow the personal instructions and contact the clinic if anything is unclear.

## Why Is Under Eye Aftercare Different?

The under eye area is delicate and sits close to the lower eyelid, cheek, skin and eye structures. Small changes in swelling, colour, comfort or symmetry can be more noticeable here than in some other facial areas.

That does not mean every change is serious. It does mean worsening symptoms, marked colour change, vision symptoms or severe pain should be taken seriously and reviewed promptly.

## Which Aftercare Questions Matter Most?

This table is general education only. It does not replace personal instructions or urgent medical care.

Aftercare question
General guidance
When to contact the clinic

Pressure near the eyes
Avoid rubbing, pressing, massaging or sleeping with pressure on the under eye area unless Corey gives different instructions.
Contact the clinic if pressure or trauma is followed by increasing pain, swelling, colour change, visual symptoms or concern.

Swelling and bruising
Some swelling, tenderness and bruising can occur while the under eye area settles.
Contact Core Aesthetics if swelling worsens, becomes one-sided, feels hot, looks unusual or is paired with increasing discomfort.

Heat, alcohol and exercise
Avoid alcohol, vigorous exercise, saunas, steam rooms and hot yoga early on if advised.
Ask before changing timing if you have travel, an event, dental work, eye care or another facial service planned.

Skin care and makeup
Use gentle cleansing and avoid heavy makeup, strong actives, exfoliation, facial treatments or massage near freshly treated skin.
Contact the clinic if skin becomes increasingly red, hot, tender, broken or irritated.

Warning signs
Do not manage worrying under eye symptoms using internet advice alone.
Seek prompt advice for vision symptoms, severe pain, marked colour change, unusual blanching, severe asymmetry, spreading redness, fever or symptoms that feel out of proportion.

Review timing
Review should happen after the early settling period unless symptoms require earlier attention.
Ask for review guidance if swelling is not settling, symptoms are changing or you are considering any further treatment.

### How Can I Verify The Clinic?

Core Aesthetics is located at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. The clinic phone number is [0491 706 705](tel:+61491706705). Consultations are led by Corey Anderson RN, Ahpra registration NMW0001047575.

Patients can check the [Verify Core Aesthetics](/verify/) page and the Ahpra public register before booking. This guide was reviewed on 2026-06-22 for clearer consultation first wording, risk framing and reader navigation.

### General Information Only

This page provides general information for adults considering aesthetic consultation. It is not personal medical advice, a diagnosis, urgent care, a treatment recommendation or confirmation that treatment is suitable. Individual advice requires clinical assessment.

## Is this for you?

### Consider booking a consultation if

- Adults who have had tear trough or under eye treatment at Core Aesthetics and need general aftercare guidance

- Patients preparing for consultation who want to understand common under eye aftercare topics

- People who want to know when to contact the clinic after treatment

- Adults who value cautious review timing, warning sign guidance and personal instructions

### This may not be for you if

- People with severe pain, vision symptoms, colour change or rapidly worsening swelling who need urgent care

- People seeking personalised medical advice without assessment

- People seeking a fixed swelling timeline or fixed visible change

- People whose personal aftercare instructions differ from this general guide

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

## Frequently asked questions

What is this guide for?

It answers a narrower under eye and tear trough assessment question. It should help readers prepare for consultation, understand when waiting or referral may be safer, and choose a related guide if their concern is wider than this topic.

How is this different from Lip Treatment Aftercare Guide?

Use this guide when its wording most closely matches your concern, area or appointment question. Use the related guide when that page is closer to what you need to clarify. Neither page confirms suitability or replaces an individual consultation.

Does reading this page mean treatment is suitable?

No. Suitability depends on individual assessment, health history, medicines, allergies, previous treatment, expectations, timing, risk and review access. Corey Anderson RN may recommend treatment discussion, waiting, referral, review later or no cosmetic treatment.

Can I book just to ask questions?

Yes. A consultation can be used to understand the concern, ask about suitability, discuss risks and decide whether doing nothing for now is the better choice. You do not need to arrive already committed to a treatment plan.

What should I bring to the consultation?

Bring current medicines, allergies, relevant medical history, previous cosmetic treatment dates, upcoming events, travel plans and questions you want answered. Bring records from another clinic or clinician if they are relevant and available.

Can Corey recommend waiting or no treatment?

Yes. Waiting, referral, review later or no treatment may be recommended when the concern is mild, expectations are unclear, timing is poor, risk outweighs likely benefit, symptoms need another pathway or more information is needed.

Is this page personal medical advice?

No. This page is general information for adults considering consultation. It cannot diagnose a concern, confirm suitability, replace urgent care or recommend treatment. Personal advice requires an individual assessment with a qualified health practitioner.

## Continue reading

- [Tear Trough Treatment Consultation Melbourne Assessment first advice for under eye hollowing, tear trough shadows, cheek support, puffiness and suitability.](/tear-trough-treatment-melbourne/)

- [Tear Trough Consultation A tear trough consultation assesses the under eye area, cheek support, skin quality and suitability before any treatment pathway is discussed.](/tear-trough-consultation/)

- [Under Eye Hollowing Consultation Melbourne Under eye hollowing, tear trough shadow, puffiness, pigment and cheek support can look similar in photos but need different consultation decisions.](/under-eye-hollowing-consultation-melbourne/)

- [Tear Trough Suitability Assessment Tear trough suitability needs cautious assessment because under-eye concerns can come from hollowing, puffiness, skin quality, pigmentation, cheek support, eyelid anatomy, health history or symptoms. Corey Anderson RN assesses whether treatment discussion, waiting, referral or no treatment is safest.](/tear-trough-treatment-suitability-assessment/)

- [Tear Trough Treatment Guide Tear trough treatment planning starts with the cause of the under-eye concern, not with a fixed treatment request. Corey Anderson RN considers hollowing, puffiness, cheek support, skin quality, eyelid anatomy, medical history, risks, aftercare and review access before deciding whether treatment discussion, waiting, referral or no treatment is appropriate.](/guide-to-tear-trough-treatment/)

- [Tear Trough Or Cheek Treatment A consultation-first guide to suitability, consent, timing and practical next steps before any treatment decision.](/tear-trough-vs-cheek-treatment-which-is-right/)

## Clinical references

- [Ahpra advertising higher risk cosmetic procedures](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-advertising-guidelines.aspx)

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

- [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)
