Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Apr 26
Individuals increasingly use cadaver fat injections for cosmetic enhancement
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Apr 26

Individuals increasingly use cadaver fat injections for cosmetic enhancement

7 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Apr 26
  • Clinics like Alpha Male in Manhattan report rising demand, with at least 75 alloClae procedures performed since early 2025, especially among wealthy professionals seeking minimal downtime.
  • The trend is partly driven by users of GLP-1 drugs, such as Ozempic, who seek to restore lost facial or body volume, and raises ethical questions about donor consent for cosmetic use.
  • This surge reflects broader anxieties about aging, shifting beauty standards, and the commercialization of body image, as anti-aging procedures become more common and socially accepted among younger demographics.
Is the 'Ozempic face' boom creating a market for injectable cadaver fat?
When you donate your body, could your final gift become cosmetic filler?
Does the cosmetic use of donor tissue threaten life-saving organ donations?
At $100,000 a treatment, is this the ultimate luxury in anti-aging?
Can using 'zombie filler' in the breast mask early signs of cancer?
Why is an injectable from a human body regulated less strictly than Botox?