And I Owe Them an Apology.
Not for the weight loss. That part worked. But for what I didn't warn them about.
The hollowing.
The sagging.
The way their faces seemed to age 10 years in 6 months.
I watched patient after patient come back something along the lines of:
“I finally fit into my jeans… but I don't recognize the woman in the mirror.”
For months, I told them it was just “rapid weight loss.” That their skin would catch up.
I was wrong.
It was a Tuesday afternoon.
A patient I'll call “Margaret” sat in my office crying. She was 52. Lost 47 pounds on Wegovy.
Not tears of joy. Tears of grief.
“I finally have the body I've wanted for 30 years,” she said. “But when I look in the mirror, I see my grandmother staring back at me.”
She pulled out her phone and showed me photos.
Before: Full cheeks. Defined jawline. She looked her age, vibrant, healthy, alive.
After 8 months: Hollowed temples. Sunken eyes. Skin that looked like it was “sliding off her skull” (her exact words).
“Everyone keeps asking if I'm sick,” she whispered. “My husband looks at me differently.”
That night, I couldn't sleep.
Because she was one of 50 or more patients to come back with the same complaint.
And I had no answers.
I went looking for them.
I spent 6 weeks diving into the research. Talking to dermatologists. Reading every study I could find on GLP-1 medications and facial aging.
What I discovered made me angry.
Not at the medications. They save lives.
But at how unprepared we were for the side effects. And how badly I had been failing my patients by dismissing their concerns as “just weight loss.”
Here's what the research revealed:
Your face isn't just “losing fat.”
Your facial cells are being starved.
Let me explain. Because this is the part that changes everything.
When you take GLP-1 medications, they do an incredible job of targeting visceral fat, the dangerous fat around your organs.
But here's the problem:
The deep fat pads in your face (the ones that keep your cheeks full, your skin lifted, your jawline defined) metabolically behave like visceral fat.
They have the same receptor profile. The same sensitivity.
So when the medication goes hunting for “bad” fat to burn…
It can't tell the difference between the dangerous fat around your liver and the structural fat holding your face up.
Your face gets caught in the crossfire.
The fat loss doesn't explain why your skin looks so… dead.
Here's what's really happening. Your face is being attacked from THREE directions at once:
Your deep facial fat pads are being burned as “visceral fat.” These are the tent poles holding your face up. When they deflate, the canvas collapses. That's the hollowing. The jowls. The “sliding” sensation.
Your skin has regenerative stem cells that repair damage and produce collagen. They need glucose for energy. But GLP-1 medications appear to block glucose uptake in these specific cells.
The cells that produce collagen need to feel tension to stay active. When your fat pads deflate rapidly, that tension disappears.
| Attack | What's Happening | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Structural Collapse | Deep facial fat pads are burned as “visceral” fat | Hollowing, sagging, jowls |
| Cellular Starvation | Stem cells can't get energy to repair skin | Grey, dull, lifeless appearance |
| Mechanical Silencing | Fibroblasts go dormant without tension | Skin won't “snap back” |
To actually fix this, you need to address all three attacks at once.
- Bypass the cellular energy blockade
- Reactivate dormant collagen cells
- Protect what's left from scarring
I was reading a study on mitochondrial function when I found it.
Astaxanthin.
Most people know it as “that antioxidant from salmon.” That description doesn't do it justice.
Here's what makes it different:
Unlike most antioxidants floating randomly in your bloodstream, astaxanthin has a unique molecular structure. It physically embeds itself into the mitochondrial membrane, the power plant of your cells.
But that's not all.
A 2023 study showed astaxanthin specifically protects Adipose-Derived Stem Cells, the exact cells being starved in “Ozempic Face.” It activates something called the Nrf2 pathway, helping these cells survive metabolic stress and keep functioning even when glucose is blocked.
And here's what really got my attention:
Astaxanthin directly upregulates Type 1 Collagen production and appears to mimic mechanical tension signals.
Finally: it blocks the scarring response.
When fat cells are stressed during rapid weight loss, they can turn into hard, fibrotic scar tissue. That's the “waxy” look some GLP-1 users develop.
Astaxanthin inhibits this transition. It protects your remaining facial fat from turning into scar.
This isn't a beauty supplement. It's a Bio-Architectural Defense System.
| Problem | How Astaxanthin Addresses It |
|---|---|
| Cellular Starvation | Embeds in mitochondria, restores ATP, creates metabolic bypass |
| Dormant Collagen Cells | Mimics tension signals, upregulates collagen production |
| Fibrotic Transformation | Blocks scarring pathways, preserves soft tissue |
| Oxidative Damage | Suppresses NF-κB, protects remaining structures |
“I was devastated by what the weight loss did to my face. People kept asking if I was sick. After 8 weeks on astaxanthin, my skin has life again. The grey, dull look is gone. My daughter said I look ‘less tired.’ That's the nicest thing anyone's said to me in months.”
“I almost stopped the medication because I hated what it was doing to my face. My doctor recommended this. By week 6, I noticed my cheeks weren't as hollow. By week 12, my skin felt thicker, bouncier. I'm staying on my medication AND keeping my face.”
“I traded being invisible and fat for being visible and haggard. That's how I described it to my doctor. She gave me this. Three months later, I don't feel haggard anymore. I feel like I got the glow-up I was promised. Neck-up AND neck-down.”
“The ‘Ozempic Face’ was destroying my confidence. Nothing worked. Not collagen, not creams, not even expensive facials. This is the first thing that's made a visible difference. My jawline looks firmer. The ‘melting’ has stopped. I actually look like ME again.”
Astaxanthin is embedding into your mitochondrial membranes, beginning to restore cellular energy production. You may not see visible changes yet, but the rescue mission has begun.
Less papery, more resilient. The grey, dull undertone begins to lift. You might notice you look “less tired.”
Hollows may appear less severe. Skin texture improves. The “melting” sensation slows or stops. People stop asking if you're sick.
Collagen production is being supported. Fibroblasts are staying active. The structural decline stabilizes. You start to look, and feel, like yourself again.
The longer your fibroblasts stay dormant, the harder they are to reactivate.
“Mechanical memory” is real. Cells that forget how to work may not remember even when conditions improve.
Every week you wait is another week of continued cellular starvation, deepening dormancy, and progressive structural loss.
The sooner you give your cells the energy they need, the better your outcome.
Don't wait until the damage is permanent to act.
I should have warned my patients about this. I should have had a solution ready before they came back crying in my office.
I failed them.
I'm not going to fail you.
Try VitaRoot's Astaxanthin for just 60 days.
- Improved skin tone (less grey, more life)
- Better skin texture (less crepey, more resilient)
- Reduced “hollow” appearance
- Slowed progression of facial changes
- Increased confidence in the mirror
Get your money back if you don't see these results. Every penny. No questions asked.
Margaret came back to see me last week.
193 days since she started taking Astaxanthin.
She wasn't crying this time.
She showed me a photo from her anniversary dinner.
Candlelit. No strategic angles. No scarf hiding her neck.
Just her and her husband. Smiling.
“I look like me again,” she said.
“Not perfect. Not 30. Just… me.”
That's all any of us want.