A Patient with Questions and a Surgeon in Hesitation
She’s 38. Post-partum. She’s done her research — she knows what she wants. She sits in your clinic and asks: “Which is better, fat transfer or filler?”You pause. You give her the general answer. But in the back of your mind, you know you haven’t done enough of either to give her the answer she deserves.
This is one of the most common questions in cosmetic gynecology consultations — and one of the least addressed in formal training.Most surgeons default to filler because it’s simpler. But simpler isn’t always better. And for some patients, it’s the wrong choice entirely.The conversation doesn’t end at the procedure. It starts with understanding when each technique wins — and when it fails.
Fat transfer gives a permanent, natural result. It’s the right choice for patients with significant volume loss and sufficient donor sites. The challenge is unpredictable resorption — typically 30-50%.HA filler is predictable, reversible, and faster. The right choice for patients wanting a trial result or who lack suitable donor fat. The challenge is longevity — 12-18 months maximum, with repeat sessions required.In the course, I show both procedures in full — Fat Transfer Cases 1 and 2 (Videos 4 and 13) and Labia Majora HA Filler (Video 7). You’ll see the real difference in tissue handling, patient positioning, and outcome at the end of each case.
This isn’t a technique debate. It’s a clinical decision-making framework. And the only way to build that framework is to watch both procedures on real patients — not diagrams, not models.That’s exactly what Module 1 gives you.