At a glance
- 4 matching treatments
- Usually 3–6 sessions, depending on skin
- For blemished, acne-prone skin
Lifting & firming — what works without surgery?
Non-surgical lifting means: we activate your own collagen production and firm contours with targeted heat or plasma energy. No incisions, no scars, no weeks of downtime. Results are real — but build up gradually, because collagen takes time (NIH PubMed: RF and Skin Tightening).
When does lifting make sense?
As soon as you notice softening contours — usually mid-30s onward. Typical areas:
- Jawline and cheeks lose definition
- Nasolabial folds deepen
- Forehead skin softens, brows drift down slightly
- Neck shows fine horizontal lines or softer contour
- Eyelids feel heavier, eye area looks tired
Treatments at Sahel Beauty
RF Lifting firms mid and deep skin layers with radiofrequency warmth. Controlled heat triggers collagen formation. Right after the session contours look visibly defined; full effect over multiple sessions.
Pollogen Therapy with RF Lifting combines RF with OxyGeneo skincare. You get firming and glow at once — our most powerful double-action treatment.
Plasma Pen treats spot zones like eyelids, forehead lines and the mouth area — and is also available as a full-face option for a complete lifting. Small plasma arcs trigger controlled skin regeneration. 5–7 days of crusts after, then visible firming (American Academy of Dermatology — Cosmetic Procedures).
What to expect
Right after RF Lifting contours look fresher. A 4–6 session series delivers months of visible firmness. Plasma Pen shows once the crusts heal — markedly firmer skin after 4–6 weeks.
We discuss your expectations and realistic results before every treatment. Non-surgical lifting doesn't replace a facelift — but delivers tangible improvement with minimal risk.
Maintenance and care
- Daily SPF 30+ — UV degrades collagen faster than any treatment builds it (AAD — Sun Protection)
- Retinol and vitamin C at home support collagen
- Enough sleep and water
- Top-ups every 6–12 months keep results stable
Scientific sources: NIH PubMed · American Academy of Dermatology.
This information does not replace a medical diagnosis.



