• Mail us: support@drtimpearce.com
  • Trustpilot
Dr Tim Pearce, eLearningDr Tim Pearce, eLearningDr Tim Pearce, eLearning Dr Tim Pearce, eLearning
  • eLearning Courses
        • ELEARNING COURSES

        • Techniques
          • BOTOX® Foundation Course
          • Pro Tox
          • Dermal Fillers Foundation Course
          • 8D Lip Design
          • Julie Horne Directs, Dr Tim Injects – February 2023
          • Eyelash Enhancement Serum Course
          • Anatomy360
          • Art Codes
        • Complications
          • Botulinum Toxin Complications Mastery
          • Dermal Filler Complications Mastery
          • Elective Lip Reversal
        • Profinity
        • Wellness
          • How To Introduce Longevity To Your Aesthetics Clinic
        • Marketing
          • DCAM 2.0
          • Canva Mastery: A Step-by-Step Guide
          • Email Marketing Course
          • Industry Photography Secrets
          • How to find your voice with video
        • Other Services
          • DPP for V300 Service
        • Packages
          • Foundation eLearning Package – SAVE 10%
          • Complications eLearning Package – SAVE 10%
          • Techniques eLearning Package – SAVE 20%
          • Marketing eLearning Package – SAVE 20%
          • Full eLearning Package – SAVE 35%
        • Reviews and Testimonials
        • FAQ – Online Courses
  • Downloads
        • Complications
          • 13 Extra Risky Injection Areas: Facial Vessel Map
          • Aspirating Experiment Test Results
          • Bruising Checklist: Prevent & Minimise Bruises from Injectables
          • Dermal Filler Complications: The Essential Guide
          • Delayed Onset Nodules: How To Diagnose And Treat
          • Diagnosing Complications: 7 Steps To Great Advice
          • Emergency Reversal Protocol
          • How To Avoid Causing a Lateral Rectus Palsy From Botulinum Toxins
          • Hyalase Consent Form: Downloadable Template
          • Lumps in Lips Guide: How to Diagnose, Manage & Treat
          • Tear Trough Oedema Protocol
          • Does Covid-19 Vaccine Cause Dermal Filler Reactions?
        • Injection Techniques
          • 26 Essential Injection Patterns For Botulinum Toxin
          • Botox Calculator
          • BOTOX Lesson – Gummy Smile
          • BOTOX Lesson – Hooded Eyes
          • Frequently Used Filler Volumes Facial Map
          • How To Improve Your Needle Control: 6-Step Blueprint
          • How to Prepare BOTOX – Step by Step Guide
        • Consultation Skills
          • Body Dysmorphia & Modification Checklist
          • Is It Safe To Treat? 5-Step Contraindication Check List
          • Medical Model For Cosmetic Procedures: An Essential Guide
        • Lips
          • Lip Consultation Question Checklist
          • Lip Anatomy Lesson
          • Common Needle/Cannula Choices For Lips
          • Lip Filler Aftercare Pack for Your Patients
          • Lip Design Blueprint – 4 Steps To Perfect Lip Augmentation
          • Master the Basics of Julie Horne’s Lip Technique
        • Longevity
          • Does HRT Increase Cancer Risk? Guide for Clinicians
          • Educating Patients About How Sugar Exacerbates Aging
          • How to Reduce Biological Age for Your Patients
        • Business & Marketing
          • Annual Profit Calculator
          • 5 Steps to Create a Successful Aesthetics Business
          • Injector’s Cheat Sheet – 7 Social Media Post Types
          • 7 Deadly Hashtag Sins
          • 7 Secret Locations to get Instagram Followers
          • 9 Video Marketing Mistakes
          • 15 Easy Instagram Reels Ideas
          • 3 Time-Saving Hacks for Social Media
          • Personal Branding Starter Kit
          • Value Audit Template: Price-per-1ml
          • World’s Top 5 Filler Brands – Survey Results
  • Products
    • Artistic Anatomy Poster Collection
    • Top 3 Posters Bundle
    • Original Anatomy Poster
    • Beautiful Lip Anatomy Poster
    • Download Pack – Forms & Leaflets
  • Blog
    • Meet the Writers
  • About
    • Dr Tim Pearce
    • Miranda Pearce
    • Careers & Recruitment
    • Webinars
    • Become a Model
  • Contact
  • Login

Login

How to reduce the risk of vascular occlusion when injecting the philtrum

Blogs

  • ALL
  • Complications
  • Injection Techniques
  • Consultation Skills
  • Lips
  • Business & Marketing
You may be interested
How to reduce the risk of vascular occlusion when injecting the philtrum

How to reduce the risk of vascular occlusion when injecting the philtrum

March 26, 2026

Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression

Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression

March 19, 2026

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’

March 24, 2026

Facial Muscle Anatomy for Botulinum Toxin

Facial Muscle Anatomy for Botulinum Toxin

March 12, 2026

Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation

Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation

March 17, 2026

How to reduce the risk of vascular occlusion when injecting the philtrumDr Tim Pearce
March 26, 2026

A few years ago, a colleague experienced their first vascular occlusion while injecting the philtrum. They handled the situation well, managing it over a hard weekend with multiple visits and treatments and a full 48 hours devoted to resolving the problem for their patient. But afterwards, they were left with a terrible sense of fear about restarting. They emailed asking the question that sits in the back of every injector’s mind after a complication: how can I ever avoid this happening again?

That fear is understandable, and it does not have to be paralysing. The anatomy of the philtrum creates specific risks that, once you understand them properly, you can take practical steps to manage. The columella artery is the vessel at the centre of this conversation, and getting comfortable with its course and behaviour is what separates injectors who treat with confidence from those who avoid the area altogether.

The anatomy you need to know

The columella artery, when viewed from the front, often runs parallel to and even within the philtral columns. It branches from the superior labial artery, which we know sits most commonly underneath the orbicularis oris muscle, though it can also run within the muscle and occasionally superficial to it.

According to cadaveric studies, the columella artery has two branches: a deep branch and a superficial branch. The deep branch contributes blood supply to the nasal septum, which carries its own clinical significance because a vascular occlusion in the lip could potentially affect this area too. The superficial branch naturally becomes superior to the orbicularis oris muscle, which makes it more vulnerable to the needle during philtrum treatment.

This is where the anatomy of the philtrum itself creates the problem. The philtrum curves, and the nasolabial angle means the artery must make its way into the path of a straight needle pointed towards the nose. The deeper your needle travels, the closer it gets to the columella artery. This relationship between needle depth and arterial proximity is the single most important concept to grasp when treating this area.

Why the philtrum is particularly tricky

The shape of the philtrum works against you in a way that other injection sites do not. A straight needle inserted into a curved structure will naturally change its depth as it progresses, and this tendency for the needle to travel deeper into the muscle as it follows the curve of the philtrum catches injectors out. You might start at a safe depth and gradually end up much closer to the columella artery than you intended, without any conscious change in your technique.

Illustration of the columella artery and superior labial artery anatomy around the philtrum and nose, showing a needle approaching the lip for dermal filler injection
The columella artery branches from the superior labial artery and runs parallel to the philtral columns, making needle depth and aspiration technique critical when injecting this area.

This is compounded by the fact that the needle runs parallel to the artery in this area. In most injection sites, you might cross an artery briefly as your needle passes through, and the risk exists at a single point. When the needle and the artery are running in the same direction, the window of risk extends along the entire length of your injection. If you are performing a linear thread technique through the philtrum, the needle could be tracking alongside or even within the vessel for several millimetres.

Practical steps to reduce your risk

There are several things you can do to become safer when treating the philtrum, and none of them require you to avoid the area entirely.

Limiting your treatment to the lower two thirds of the philtrum is one of the most straightforward adjustments you can make. The more superior your injection, the closer the artery becomes, so staying in the lower portion of the philtrum gives you a larger margin of safety. This is a simple geographic boundary that reduces risk without compromising the treatment outcome for most patients.

Being conscious of your needle depth matters enormously here. Because the philtrum curves and the needle does not, the tip naturally drifts deeper as you advance. One practical technique to manage this is pinching the philtrum into a straighter shape before you inject, which aligns the tissue more closely with the shape of the needle and helps maintain a consistent depth throughout the thread. This physical manipulation of the tissue is something you can practise and develop a feel for over time.

Positive aspirations are actually quite common at the top of the philtrum in aesthetic practice, and there is no clinical need to go as deep as many injectors do in most patients. Staying superficial where you can is a meaningful risk reduction strategy.

Making aspiration work harder for you

Because the needle runs parallel to the artery in this area, a single aspiration at the start of a linear thread only tells you about one point along that track. You could aspirate negative at the beginning and then move directly into the vessel as you advance. This is where increasing the number of aspirations during a single pass becomes valuable.

When performing a linear thread through the philtrum, you can aspirate as many times as you like. Two or three aspirations along the length of the thread would significantly increase the sensitivity of the technique in terms of detecting whether you are in an artery. Each negative aspirate is decreasing the probability of being intraarterially prior to injecting. Mathematically, the cumulative effect of multiple negative results gives you substantially more confidence than a single test.

The technique takes almost no additional time once you are used to it, and it causes no harm. The benefits outweigh any drawbacks quite clearly. For injectors who have been taught that a single aspiration is sufficient, adding two or three more along a philtrum thread is an easy upgrade that requires no new equipment, no additional training, and no change to your overall treatment plan.

What to check if you suspect a vascular occlusion

If you do suspect a vascular occlusion during or after a philtrum treatment, the anatomy should guide your assessment. The columella artery’s course means you need to check more than just the injection site. Examine the philtrum itself, then the columella, the nose tip, and inside the nostrils towards the septum. That deep branch supplying the nasal septum means an occlusion originating in the lip could show signs in areas your patient might not immediately connect to their lip treatment.

Get a cotton bud and test capillary refill in each of these areas carefully. The speed at which colour returns after you press and release the tissue tells you whether blood flow is intact. Checking each area systematically, rather than focusing only on where you injected, gives you the fullest picture of what is happening and whether you need to escalate your management.

Fear does not have to stop you treating

The colleague who emailed after their first occlusion was experiencing something very common among aesthetic injectors. A complication, even one that resolves well, can shake your confidence in a way that makes you question whether you should be treating certain areas at all. The answer lies in understanding the anatomy well enough that you know precisely why the complication occurred and what you can change to reduce the probability of it happening again.

Limiting depth, treating the lower philtrum, pinching the tissue to match the needle, and aspirating multiple times along a linear thread are all concrete adjustments that meaningfully reduce risk. They are not guarantees, because no technique eliminates risk entirely, but they represent a thoughtful approach grounded in anatomical understanding that allows you to treat with appropriate confidence.

The philtrum is a valuable treatment area that patients want addressed. Walking away from it entirely because of fear means your patients miss out on a treatment that can beautifully enhance the lip and cupid’s bow. Walking into it armed with better knowledge of the columella artery, a refined technique, and a systematic approach to detecting problems early is a much better position to be in.

FREE Complications Webinar

Want to overcome your fear of complications and confidently master anatomy?

Join us for one of Dr Tim's FREE upcoming webinars. .

Check dates here and save your spot

Complications Webinar
Complications webinar

Dr Tim Pearce eLearning

Dr Tim Pearce MBChB BSc (Hons) MRCGP founded his eLearning concept in 2016 in order to provide readily accessible BOTOX® and dermal filler online courses for fellow Medical Aesthetics practitioners. His objective was to raise standards within the industry – a principle which remains just as relevant today.

Our exclusive video-led courses are designed to build confidence, knowledge and technique at every stage, working from foundation level to advanced treatments and management of complications.

Thousands of delegates have benefited from the courses and we’re highly rated on Trustpilot. For more information or to discuss which course is right for you, please get in touch with our friendly team.

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Linkedin
Prev Post

Related Articles

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’ Bestseller

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’

March 24, 2026

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’
By Andrea Callaway
March 24, 2026

Longevity vs. Quick Fixes: Why We Must Stop Selling ‘Units’ and Start Selling ‘Anti-Aging Solutions’

READ MORE
Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression Bestseller

Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression

March 19, 2026

Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression
By Andrea Callaway
March 19, 2026

Bright Light, Better Mood: The Role of Light Therapy in Perinatal and Nonseasonal Depression

READ MORE
Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation Bestseller

Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation

March 17, 2026

Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation
By Andrea Callaway
March 17, 2026

Biostimulators vs. Energy-Based Devices: Clinical Guide to Long-Term Skin Rejuvenation

READ MORE

Add your Comment

Popular Courses

BOTOX® Foundation Course

BOTOX® Foundation Course

Pro Tox

Pro Tox

8D Lip Design

8D Lip Design

SEE MORE
Dr Tim Pearce

Improve your medical
aesthetics business

  • Home
  • Courses
  • About
  • Contact
  • Dr Tim Limited Terms and Conditions of Sale
  • Privacy Policy
  • Website Terms Of Use
  • Careers
Login Dr Tim Pearce Login
© Copyright Dr Tim Ltd, 2025
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. Read More. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
Cookie Settings Reject All Accept All
Manage consent

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
SAVE & ACCEPT