What is Innotox? People on social media are self-injecting 'Korean botox' at home

Marie Neidert, 43, first started getting Botox about three years ago as a way to manage her migraines, but enjoyed the cosmetic side effects too
Marie Neidert, 43, first started getting Botox about three years ago as a way to manage her migraines, but enjoyed the cosmetic side effects too.
When the medspa she goes to switched to a different neurotoxin, she didn’t see the same level of tightening of her 11 lines and laugh lines, says Neidert, who lives in St. James, Missouri.
The new product was now only lasting “like a month and a half, two months,” Neidert tells TODAY.com. “And price-wise, I was like, this is ridiculous.”
She was paying about $600-700 for toxin every few months.
Neidert had seen other people on TikTok post about getting “great results” from self-injecting Innotox, a Korean injectable containing the same active ingredient as Botox.
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