That makes me wonder: just the way botox, if wrongfully applied (place or dose) in the area can create problems with the movements of the mouth, can't the injection of fillers interfere with smiling?
In the case of the injection of fillers right underneath the nose, whether at the very center of it or at the sides, are the muscles of the mouth affected? In other words, can someone having a filler injected right underneath the nose affect the orbicularis oris or other muscle that would make him/her end up not being able to raise his/her lips as usual when smiling? I am talking of a problem that would the opposite of a gummy smile: not showing any gum or not fully showing teeth.
Is that a danger or do the muscles around the nose remain unharmed?
Or are the muscles linked to those movements that make the teeth and gums show more or less not affected by the injection of fillers?
On a sidenote, I only had once (because there was a "leftover" of my syringue) some resty injected in the nasolabial folds (although I don't have that done regularly, I don't think I need it), but I remember that for one day, I could not smile as "open". Which in my case was not bad because I tend to have a gummy smile. But it went away. Why did it happen? is it out of the inflammation response of the area resulting from having injected something?
Hope my questions are not too confusing. I have been watching anatomy documentaries, and then when reading the posts about non surgical nose jobs, this anatomy questions popped up in my head
