Show patients their result before they treat.
Thin, short, or sparse lashes enhanced to look longer, fuller, and more defined.
Sarah Jenkins
Plan #4231 • Upper Face
Recommended Protocol
Lash & Brow Growth Serums
For Eyelash Growth
Prescription lash serums (bimatoprost)
At-home maintenance
Thin or sparse lashes are enhanced with prescription growth serums (bimatoprost, e.g. Latisse) and peptide lash conditioners that lengthen and thicken the lashes over several weeks. Med spas guide product selection and technique; results build with consistent nightly use and are maintained ongoing.
Eyelash growth as a concern is having lashes that are thin, short, sparse, or lacking volume, which can make the eyes look less defined. It can stem from genetics, aging, or damage from cosmetics.
For a practice, lash enhancement is an easy, recurring service that pairs naturally with brow and eye treatments. The clinical goal is longer, fuller, healthier lashes through prescription serums and supportive therapies. Showing the patient the projected, fuller-lash look helps frame an ongoing maintenance plan.
Eyelash Growth
Where it appears
Eyelashes
Facial area
Upper Face
Treatment paths
1
From in-clinic procedures to at-home regimens, Afters maps the full range of options — so patients can see what each one would do for them, on their own photo, before they commit.
Professional procedures performed by a provider to target the concern directly.
Medical-grade products patients use between visits to maintain results.
Patients rarely come in for just one thing. Browse other concerns Afters can visualize.
Common questions patients ask about eyelash growth — and what practices should be ready to answer.
Genetics, aging, harsh cosmetics, lash extensions, and certain conditions can weaken or reduce lashes over time.
Prescription serums with bimatoprost are clinically shown to lengthen and thicken lashes. Peptide-based conditioners can support lash health with consistent use.
Most people see noticeable improvement in 4–8 weeks, with full results around 12–16 weeks of nightly application.
They're generally safe when used as directed. A provider reviews your history, since prescription serums can have side effects like temporary irritation.
Lashes gradually return to baseline a few weeks to months after stopping, so ongoing maintenance keeps them full.
Afters simulates the outcome on a patient's own photo and builds a visual 12-month plan — so consults convert and average ticket climbs.