Volume treatment is a general term people use when asking about facial hollowing, flattening, support, contour or proportion concerns. It should not be treated as a product choice. At Core Aesthetics, Corey Anderson RN assesses anatomy, skin quality, movement, medical history, previous treatment, expectations, risk and timing before discussing whether planning, waiting, review, referral or no treatment is appropriate.
What Volume Treatment Means at Core Aesthetics
Public-facing information about volume treatment needs to be careful. It should help patients understand the clinical idea without advertising a prescription product or implying that treatment is available to everyone.
In practical terms, Corey uses the phrase to describe a consultation pathway for people concerned about facial support, hollowing, flattening, contour change or proportion. The appointment is where the cause, limits, risks and options are discussed.
What It May Be Used to Assess
Volume related concerns can involve several facial regions. Some patients notice cheek flattening or midface hollowing. Others notice temple hollowing, deeper shadows, changes around folds, lip proportion changes or lower face support concerns.
Those concerns may be related to volume change, but they can also involve skin quality, facial movement, weight change, ageing pattern, dental structure, natural anatomy or previous treatment. Consultation sorts those possibilities before any recommendation is made.
Why It Is Not Just About Adding Volume
The phrase can make treatment sound as though the aim is simply to add more. That is not how conservative facial planning should work. The aim, where treatment is suitable, is to support proportion, facial balance and a realistic clinical goal.
Sometimes a very small plan is enough. Sometimes a staged plan is safer. Sometimes the right answer is not to treat, because adding volume would not address the main issue or would create a result that looks less balanced.
How Corey Assesses Volume Concerns
The assessment looks at the face at rest and in movement, from multiple angles. Corey reviews the area that bothers you, adjacent facial zones, natural asymmetry, skin quality, tissue thickness, medical history, medicines, previous treatment and your expectations.
This is also where risk is discussed. Suitability is not only about whether something can technically be done. It is about whether proceeding is sensible for that person, in that area, at that time.
Volume, Skin and Movement Are Different Problems
Volume related planning is different from skin focused care and different from movement related line assessment. These concerns can overlap, which is why self diagnosis often becomes frustrating. A hollow looking area may be shadow, skin quality, anatomy or support. A fold may be influenced by nearby structures rather than the fold itself.
The consultation helps decide whether the concern is primarily structural, skin related, movement related, mixed or outside the scope of cosmetic treatment.
Risks and Limitations
All aesthetic procedures carry risk. For volume related treatment, relevant risks may include swelling, bruising, asymmetry, lumps, infection, dissatisfaction, delayed settling and rare but serious complications related to vascular anatomy. Corey discusses relevant risks and warning symptoms during consultation where treatment is being considered.
No page can tell you that treatment is safe or suitable for you. That decision depends on individual assessment and informed consent.
Same Day Treatment Is Not Automatic
Some adult patients may be suitable for treatment on the same day as consultation. That depends on clinical assessment, informed consent, realistic expectations, medical history, timing and whether proceeding is appropriate.
Booking a consultation does not mean treatment. It gives Corey the opportunity to explain the options, risks, alternatives and whether same day treatment should be considered, delayed or avoided.
When Volume Treatment May Not Be Recommended
Corey may recommend not proceeding when the concern is not volume related, when risk outweighs likely benefit, when expectations are not realistic, when the timing is poor, when prior treatment needs review, or when another clinical pathway is more appropriate.
No treatment can be a strong recommendation. It protects the patient, the face and the quality of the decision.


What Should Be Assessed Before Volume Planning?
Volume planning should begin with the visible concern and the likely driver, not with a product assumption.
- Whether the concern is hollowing, flattening, support change, shadow, skin quality, weight change or facial proportion.
- Whether previous treatment, medical history, medicines, dental context or timing changes suitability.
- Whether the area being noticed is the true driver or part of a broader facial pattern.
- Whether waiting, staged review, referral or no treatment is more responsible than treatment planning.


When Can Volume Treatment Be The Wrong First Question?
Asking for volume treatment too early can miss the reason the face looks different.
- A hollow can be caused by shadow, skin quality, swelling, weight change, anatomy or previous treatment.
- Adding volume is not automatically suitable, even when a hollow is visible.
- Some concerns are better managed with skin care, medical review, referral, waiting or no treatment.
- Assessment should include risks, limits, aftercare and consent before any decision to proceed.
What Should You Verify Before Booking?
Before using this page to choose a next step, check that the clinic and practitioner details are clear and accountable.
- Core Aesthetics consults from 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166.
- Consultations are led by Corey Anderson RN, Registered Nurse.
- Corey can be checked on the Ahpra public register using registration number NMW0001047575.
- This page was reviewed on 8 June 2026 for consultation-first wording, suitability language, risk framing and consent language.
- The same practitioner model means assessment, planning and review are connected rather than separated across multiple providers.
Use the verification page if you want to confirm practitioner and clinic details before booking.


When Should You Book Or Wait?
Book a consultation when you want an individual assessment rather than a self selected treatment. Same day treatment is not automatic. It should only be discussed when assessment, suitability, risk discussion, informed consent and clinical judgement support proceeding.
Waiting, planned review, referral or no treatment may be the responsible recommendation. If the concern is sudden, painful, one-sided, medically unusual or changing quickly, seek appropriate medical advice before cosmetic planning.
For next steps, use book a consultation, contact the clinic, treatment suitability assessment and why no treatment may be recommended.
How This Page Connects to the Wider Site
If you want a broader service overview, read the volume treatment Melbourne page. If you are comparing possible options, the volume treatments Melbourne guide is a better next step. If your concern is cheek or midface change, the cheek volume and facial volume loss pages provide more specific context.
If you are unsure whether any treatment is suitable, start with the treatment suitability assessment page.
A Sensible Next Step
If you are trying to understand whether volume treatment is relevant to your concern, arrange a consultation with Corey. The appointment can clarify what is contributing to the change, what options may be suitable, what risks and limitations matter, and whether treatment should be considered at all.
General Information Only
This page provides general educational information for adults considering an aesthetic consultation. It is not a diagnosis, prescription, treatment recommendation or assure of suitability. Individual advice requires consultation with an appropriately registered health practitioner.
Is this for you?
Consider booking a consultation if
- You are an adult seeking assessment of facial hollowing, flattening, support or proportion concerns
- You want to understand what volume treatment means before deciding whether consultation is appropriate
- You value conservative planning, risk discussion and realistic expectation setting
- You are open to waiting, referral or no treatment if that is the safer recommendation
This may not be for you if
- You want a promised result or a treatment decision without assessment
- You are not an adult patient
- You are pregnant, trying to conceive or breastfeeding and are seeking elective aesthetic treatment
- You have an active infection, unhealed skin or an unresolved medical concern in the area to be assessed
Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment.
Frequently asked questions
What does volume treatment mean?
Volume treatment means assessment and planning for facial concerns involving hollowing, flattening, support, contour or proportion. At Core Aesthetics it is not treated as a product choice. Suitability is assessed before any option is discussed.
Is volume treatment the same for every area of the face?
No. Cheeks, temples, folds, lips and lower face concerns all have different anatomy and different risk considerations. Corey assesses the specific area and the surrounding facial structure before making a recommendation.
How do I know whether my concern is volume related?
Can volume treatment happen on the same day as consultation?
Some adult patients may be suitable for same day treatment, but it is not automatic. It depends on assessment, informed consent, realistic expectations, medical history, risk and whether proceeding that day is appropriate.
What are the risks of volume related treatment?
Can Corey recommend no volume treatment?
Yes. No treatment may be recommended if the concern is not volume related, the risk is not justified, expectations are unrealistic, prior treatment needs review or another pathway is more appropriate.
What if I have had volume treatment elsewhere?
Bring any details you have, including approximate dates, areas treated and any concerns afterwards. Previous treatment can affect anatomy, suitability and whether waiting, review or correction discussion is more appropriate.
Which page should I read next?
For the broad service overview, read the volume treatment Melbourne page. For comparison of different concerns, read volume treatments Melbourne. If you are uncertain about suitability, read the treatment suitability assessment guide.
What if someone feels nervous about facial volume consultation?
Discomfort concerns are reasonable to raise. Corey can explain what the appointment involves, what may feel uncomfortable, what can be paused, and whether your anxiety, medical history or sensitivity changes the plan. Consent can be withdrawn at any time.