The Aesthetic Contrarian Weekly Recap - Exosomes and my drug habit

“IF YOU’RE STILL CHASING MIRACLES IN AESTHETICS, THIS ONE’S GONNA HURT…”

This week I’m coming for two things: your overpriced exosome serum and
your self-righteous attitude about weight loss and hormones.

Because here’s the truth, most aesthetic professionals won’t admit—even to themselves:

We sell magic potions with shaky evidence.
We judge patients for shortcuts we secretly want to take.
We copy trends we don’t understand because it’s easier than saying “I don’t know if this actually works.”

In next week’s edition:

If you’re looking for polite, polished, PR-safe industry banter, you should
probably stop reading now.

But if you’re ready to lead with evidence, own your truth, and actually get
results?

Let’s go.

The Evidence Check

Exosomes – Miracle molecule or just another overpriced myth?
MYTH SPOTLIGHT:

Exosomes are the holy grail of regenerative aesthetics. 600% more
collagen. 300% more elastin. No downtime. Just rub ‘em in and watch the
wrinkles disappear.

This one’s spreading faster than hyaluronidase in a dodgy lip job. It’s the
shiny new toy of every clinic that’s “discovered” regenerative medicine –
usually right after attending a sponsored workshop and bulk-buying some
dodgy exosome serum for £499 a pop.

Everywhere you look: clinics hyping them, reps pushing them, influencers
slathering them on post-laser. Sounds sexy, right?

Too bad the science doesn’t quite match the sales pitch.

Reality check: So, what the hell are exosomes anyway?

Exosomes are nanosized extracellular vesicles – think of them as microscopic parcels – released by virtually every cell in the body.

They carry proteins, RNA, lipids, and other bioactive payloads between cells. Kind of like nature’s own DPD delivery service – except instead of protein bars, they deliver genetic instructions and growth signals.

Sounds promising, and biologically speaking, they are. Especially exosomes derived from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), which are shown in preclinical models to modulate inflammation, stimulate angiogenesis, and enhance collagen synthesis.

But here’s the kicker: those are cell culture and animal studies. Not RCTs in human aesthetic patients**.

Let’s break down what’s real, what’s fluff, and what’s outright illegal –
particularly if you’re practising in the UK.

Exosome Sources: Legal Vs. Illegal In The UK**

Here’s the part KOLs conveniently gloss over:
  • From umbilical cords, bone marrow, amniotic fluid, or embryonic tissue.
  • BANNED for cosmetic use in the UK. Full stop. No grey area. Illegal under
    EU and UK cosmetic regulations.
  • Quoting plastic surgeon Mr Tunc Tiryaki: “It is illegal for human-derived exosomes to be used topically in the UK. Human-derived ingredients are
    strictly banned in the UK for cosmetic purposes.”
  • Legal for topical use if CE-marked and proven safe.
  • E-50 is one example – used in post-laser healing, and legal.
  • Legal. But “legal” ≠ “clinically effective.

Yes, PRP does something for early-stage androgenetic alopecia. Probably because there’s still some vascular supply and follicular function to hijack.

But what about:

  • Scarring alopecia? Nope.
  • Post-chemo hair loss? Barely studied.
  • Traction alopecia from braids or weaves? Forget it.
  • Men over 50 with shiny domes? Please stop, it’s cruel.

One 2023 RCT showed “significant improvement” in hair count and density
in female AGA—but only in those under 35and with hair loss for under 2 years (Singh (no relation, I think?) et al., IJT). That’s a very specific sweet spot. Everyone else?

Good luck.

Moral of the story? If you’re smearing human exosomes onto faces in your UK clinic because some American speaker on Instagram said it’s fine, you’re either wilfully ignorant or legally reckless. Possibly both.

The Science: Promising, But Mostly Preclinical And Overhyped**

Let’s talk data.
So no, they’re not 1000x more effective than PRP.
Verdict? PRP may be old school and imperfect – but at least it’s your patient’s biology. You know the source, you know the risk, and you’re not waiting for the ASA to slap you with a ruling.

Why Are UK Clinics Using Them Then?

Simple: they’re great for marketing.
And let’s be real – some clinicians are banking on the placebo effect.
Patients love the ritual, the exclusivity, the idea that they’re getting cutting- edge care. Especially if it comes in a gold bottle with embossed Korean characters.
But as a clinician? You should know better.

Why Are UK Clinics Using Them Then?

If you’re staying legal and evidence-based in the UK, here’s how to approach exosomes:
  • Verify batch safety data.
  • Look for any clinical trial data (even small-scale) on the specific product.
  • Ideal for post-procedure recovery (e.g., micro needling, RF, fractional
    lasers).
  • Their anti-inflammatory properties may reduce redness or swelling – but
    they won’t replace filler, Botox, or energy-based rejuvenation.
  • Tell them it’s experimental.
  • Frame it as optional – a possible post-treatment boost, not a miracle
    molecule.
  • Fads fade. Invest in skill, not trends.
  • Build on results, reputation, and evidence – not TikTok testimonials and
    supplier slideshows.

Conclusion: What You Really Need to Know

Exosomes may well become part of mainstream regenerative medicine in the future. The mechanism is plausible. The concept is exciting. But right now?

If you’re going to be part of the new wave of evidence-led aesthetics, then stop chasing the next buzzword and start interrogating what works.

Because here’s the truth…

If your best result came from a serum instead of your skill – your clinic
doesn’t have a future, it has a fad.**

References:

Section 2: Harry's Honest Hours

The skinny jab, testosterone, and my dirty little not-so-secret

Right, here it is. I haven’t been completely honest with you.

Yeah, I’ve posted about my body transformation. The 6 am gym selfies. The
macros. The protein shakes. The motivational clichés. But I left out something. Not because I was ashamed, but because part of me thought you’d judge me the way I used to judge others.

So here goes. I took the skinny jab. Yep. Mounjaro. Semaglutide’s angry
Texan cousin. And I’m on testosterone too. Full-blown assisted living.

Now, before you roll your eyes or slide into my DMs with “But Harry, I
thought you were all about discipline,” let me walk you through how I got herw

Confession Corner: The Night My Ego Got Checked

I was in the living room. Sitting with my wife. She casually drops those two doctors at her hospital who had lost over 15kg on the skinny jab. I laughed. You know that bitter, insecure, “f**k that” kind of laugh.

I knew about Mounjaro. I’d heard of it before, and seen patients come in raving about it. I used to scoff. “Weaklings. Cheats. Just eat better and move more.” Real alpha chat. Meanwhile, I was bingeing Haribo’s like it was a competitive sport and making peace with the fact that maybe pecs weren’t for Punjabis.

But something shifted that night. My wife wasn’t suggesting I should take it. She was just stating facts. Two men, busy doctors, who found a tool and used it. I couldn’t stop thinking about it.

Reality Check: Food Was My Drug, Not My Fuel

I wasn’t obese. But I wasn’t proud of what I saw in the mirror either. I was in denial. Food wasn’t just food. It was a pleasure. Escape. Social glue when I was out with delegates. Emotional balm for the stress I wouldn’t admit I had.

I’d tell myself, “You’ve lost weight before, you know what to do.” Yeah, maybe in my thirties. But now? I’m 52. Testosterone is slowly slipping away. Motivation is on life support.

So I made a choice. Not out of desperation. But out of respect—for my future self.

The Mounjaro Moment: The Cheat Code That Isn’t Cheating

I started Mourjaro on the lowest dose. Took it properly. Tracked everything. And in TWO WEEKS—bam. Sugar cravings? GONE.

But let me be clear—I didn’t just sit on my arse waiting for the weight to fall
off like it was a Netflix subscription. I was STILL smashing the gym at 6am.
STILL eating clean. Still grinding.

Mourjaro didn’t do the work for me. It let me do the work without fighting myself every damn day. That’s the difference. It kicked me start the initial momentum I needed. People think this is cheating. Let me ask you this—if you needed glasses to see, would wearing contacts be “cheating”? This jab didn’t make me shudder. It just made me not sabotage myself every evening.

I took it for a maximum of 2 months and stopped, cold turkey style.

The Mounjaro Moment: The Cheat Code That Isn’t Cheating

After a few months, I got my annual bloods done. My T levels were low—not
tanked, but not optimal. And being me, all or nothing, like a biochemical
terrorist—I thought, “f**k it, let’s go all in.”

Started on testosterone under medical guidance. Again, no cowboy nonsense. Just facts, data, consistency. And now? Mate, I’m touching my pecs like a teenager discovering his first bicep curl.

My energy’s insane. Muscle’s coming through. I feel alive. Not “motivated”— alive. And the bonus? My wife’s not complaining either (you know what I mean).

The Slippery Slope: What I Didn’t Expect

Here’s what no influencer or TikTok bro tells you about skinny jab—you will WANT to go harder, faster, more. There’s a dangerous temptation to jump doses. Chase the high. I didn’t. But I thought about it.

And I’ve seen patients—especially women—skyrocket doses trying to amplify results and end up with depression, gut pain, and more f**ked hormones than they started with. This stuff works—but you’ve got to RESPECT it.

Lessons in Wisdom: I Was Judging What I Didn’t Understand

I used to judge people who took the jab. Thought they had no willpower. That they were weak. Turns out, I was the one with weak thinking.Now? I see it differently. Tools aren’t cheating. They’re leverage. And leverage is smart.
My 30-year-old self would’ve said: “Why didn’t you just stay consistent with food and exercise?” Fair point. But he didn’t have two decades of stress, cortisol, clinic fires, lawsuits, family chaos, and self-doubt dragging him down.
You can’t out-discipline a tired soul. Sometimes you need help. And there’s no shame in that.

Quick Win: Do What Works For YOU, Not What Looks Noble Online

Whether it’s Mounjaro, TRT, therapy, or just finally hiring a bloody coach—
stop doing life on Hard Mode for the sake of looking tough. That’s ego, not discipline.

Own your reality. Get help. Use tools. Stay the f**k away from TikTok doctors and get bloods done by someone who knows their sh*t.

So here’s my final question for you…

If you could feel more energy, lose fat, build strength, and feel proud of what you see in the mirror—would you let your pride stop you?

Because I almost did.

And I’m damn glad I didn’t.

References / Credible Sources

Section 3: Action Points

What To Do If You Want To Stay Legal, Look Good, And Not Be Full Of Sh*t*

How: Before offering any exosome treatment, ask:

  • Is it CE-marked?
  • Is it human-derived (ILLEGAL in UK aesthetics)?
  • Can I show at least one peer-reviewed human study backing its claimed
    use?

If the answer to ANY of those is no—bin it. Or expect a nice ASA letter and a patient complaint you’ll be lying about on Facebook. Why it matters: The MHRA won’t care how “gentle” it was on skin. If it’s not legal, it’s not defendable. Especially when PRP exists.

Reflection Prompt: Would I still offer this if there were no marketing benefits?

How: Be honest. If you’re a practitioner using Mounjaro, semaglutide, or testosterone, lead from the front:

  • Share the full context with patients.
  • Post with integrity—no 6-pack baiting unless you’re ready to talk about the chemistry behind it.
  • Regular blood, medical oversight, and no cowboy stacking.
  • Quick Script: “I could take your money… or I could tell you the truth. This isn’t the right treatment for you.”

Why it matters: Your patients follow your energy. Either you’re a role model of transparency, or you’re just another poser pumping hormones in silence and judging the ones who don’t.

Reflection Prompt: Am I using this as a tool or a mask?

How: For every new service or supplement you introduce:

  • Track 3 specific, patient-centered results (e.g. hydration, downtime,
    satisfaction scores).
  • Use a 90-day test window. If it flops—cut it.
  • Benchmark against gold-standard treatments (e.g. compare exosomes to
    PRP, not placebo).

Why it matters: If it doesn’t outperform the basics, it’s marketing—not medicine.

Reflection Prompt: Would I still offer this if no one else was doing it?

How: Set non-negotiables for any enhancement protocol (TRT, Mounjaro, peptides, etc.):

  • Must be medically supervised.
  • Must improve performance, not bypass effort.
  • Must be reviewed every 90 days with data, not vibes.

Why it matters: You can be both assisted and disciplined. This isn’t cheating—it’s optimisation. The problem is when the shortcut becomes the whole journey.

Reflection Prompt: Would I still go to the gym if the jabs stopped working?

Grab a whiteboard, journal, or clinic notes app.

Make two columns:

  • Column A: “Treatments I Believe In”
  • Column B: “Treatments I Market Because Others Do”

Go through everything you offer. One by one. Be brutally honest.

Anything in Column B? You’ve got 30 days to either prove it works—or replace it with something that does.

Outcome: You walk into your clinic with conviction again. Not confusion.

The Wrap-Up Question For You:

If tomorrow all your fancy serums, shiny jabs, and clever branding were taken away, would your patients still trust you?

If the answer’s yes, you’re doing it right.

If the answer’s no, maybe it’s time you stopped selling skin magic and started rebuilding clinical mastery.

References / Sources To Explore:

Coming in the next brutal dose of truth…

Next Week I’m Taking The Industry’s Holy Cows And Serving Them Rare

Time to ruffle feathers, burn some sacred scrolls, and tell you why most of what you’re seeing on Instagram is either legally risky, clinically useless, or financially suicidal.

This week, we go deep into three topics guaranteed to piss someone off (and probably get forwarded to a WhatsApp group chat full of insecure KOLs).

The Evidence Check:

Ultrasound in Facial Aesthetics – Lies, Damn Lies, and Sponsored Statistics Ultrasound is the new religion in aesthetics. Everyone’s suddenly a face-mapping radiologist after a weekend course and a few #vascularsafety hashtags. But here’s the question no one’s asking: Where’s the actual data to justify the hype?

In this section, I break down what ultrasound can do, what it absolutely can’t, and how KOLs have twisted the evidence into a marketing strategy. Hint: there’s a reason no one’s citing double-blinded RCTs—they don’t exist.

Yet.

Harry’s Honest Hour:

How Many Lawsuits Can One Man Have Before He Cracks?

In next week’s edition:

Forget imposter syndrome. Try being sued by a university, a pharma giant, and some bloke who thinks he owns the word “aesthetics.” This week I open the vault on my legal horror stories—the ones I never talk about publicly.

Not to play victim, but to show you exactly how to survive when your reputation, money, and sanity are all under attack. Think of this as legal PTSD with a side of resilience training.

Action Points

Five Brutal Moves to Bulletproof Your Practice (And Your Brain)

Tired of being reactive? Of panicking when complications hit, or freezing when Karen threatens legal action? In this final section, I hand you a toolkit—no fluff, just five tactical moves to:

  • Reduce your clinical liability,
  • Handle complaints like a f***ing adult, and finally stop chasing treatments that make you anxious instead of confident.

If you’re serious about staying in this game without ending up broke, burnt out or barred—read this one twice.

READ ON IF YOU DARE. OR CLOSE THIS NOW AND GO WATCH ANOTHER REEL ABOUT “JAWLINE GOALS.”

Either way, I’ll still be here. Telling the truth you’re not supposed to say out loud.

P.S. Got a colleague who thinks they know what they’re doing but still
handing out Arnica like it’s gospel? Forward them this newsletter—IF they
can handle the truth (cue Jack Nicholson voice: “YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!”).

If they survive it and still want more, they can subscribe over at:

Warning: no fluff, no filters, no sponsored BS. Just evidence, honesty, and the occasional ego bruising.
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