Aesthetic Concerns in Montreal

Patients do not always begin with the name of a treatment. They often begin with a question: Why does my face look less balanced? What is causing a tired expression? Which options can address uneven texture? What should I ask about gradual hair thinning?

This Montreal concerns hub organizes those questions before connecting them to related service pages. It is educational and does not replace an in-person medical assessment.

Facial balance and volume changes

Changes in proportion can involve the lips, cheeks, chin, jawline, under-eye area, or profile. The appropriate discussion depends on anatomy, movement, previous treatments, and whether the goal is hydration, support, definition, or a more balanced relationship between areas. Read the facial balancing guide.

Expression lines and facial movement

Forehead lines, frown lines, brow position, and lower-face muscle activity are movement concerns, not simply static wrinkles. A consultation evaluates which muscles are involved and how much movement the patient wants to preserve. Read the expression-lines guide.

Skin texture and acne-scar concerns

Uneven texture can relate to acne scars, enlarged-looking pores, surface dryness, congestion, sun exposure, or gradual changes in collagen. The treatment conversation depends on skin history, sensitivity, downtime tolerance, and realistic sequencing. Read the skin-texture guide.

Hair thinning

Hair thinning may be gradual or more noticeable over a shorter period. The first step is understanding the pattern, timeline, medical context, and whether additional assessment is needed before discussing an in-clinic option. Read the hair-thinning guide.

From concern to consultation

During consultation, Dr. Golbarg Mansour reviews the concern, relevant history, anatomy or skin condition, and the patient’s priorities. The result may be a single treatment discussion, a staged plan, home-care guidance, or a recommendation not to proceed.

Explore all medical aesthetic treatment categories, read Montreal patient-education articles, or request a consultation.