Doctor Fox in Gahanna, Ohio

Name: Justin Fox, MD
Last name: Fox
Began aesthetic medicine in: 2017
Years experience: 6
Primary Specialty: Physician
Business: Fox Aesthetics
Address: 159 N. High St.
City: Gahanna
State: Ohio
Zip Code: 43230
Country: US
Consulting Fees: 0$
Has Sponsored Offer : No
Clinical Privileges
  • The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
Postdoc Training
  • Residency: Plastic surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Chief resident, 2017
GPS coordinates on map: 39.9622,-83.0007019

Primary location
Location name: Columbus
State: OH
Country: US
Map point: 39.9622,-83.0007019
Treatments
  • Botox
  • Botox for Migraines
  • Dermal Fillers
  • Lip Fillers
  • Restylane
  • Restylane Defyne
  • Restylane Lyft
  • Restylane Refyne
  • Restylane Silk

Justin Fox, MD

RealSelf Info

Rating: 5.0
Profile views: 189
Answer count: 2
Review count: 1
Star rating: 2.0473720558371
Profile created: Aug 9, 2018
Profile modified: Oct 2, 2019
Profile promotion: No
Profile inactive: No
Premier status: Free
Tier: Free-Unclaimed
RealCare Promise: No
Directory link: Physician
RealSelf’s PRO: No
Doctor Designation Start Time: Sep 4, 2018
Doctor Designation End Time: Jan 1, 2033

Locations

  • Columbus, OH, US. GPS coordinates: 39.9622,-83.0007019

Latest ratings of treatments

  • Botox (Sep 2023) – Overall rating: 5/5
  • Botox (Sep 2018) – Overall rating: 5/5
  • Botox (Sep 2018) – Overall rating: 5/5

Doctor’s answers

Question
Answer Header & Date
Answer Snippet
Is it normal to have blurry and double vision after Botox for migraines?
Blurry or double vision is unusual
Sep 3, 2018
If the symptoms presented within weeks of the injections, you should follow up with your injector. If not, I would recommend follow up with your primary care provider. Those symptoms are not expected after injection for migraine.
Will Botox for Migraines make neck pain worse?
Botox may help
Sep 3, 2018
I’m sorry to hear about your neck strain. You are correct that the recommended treatment pattern for migraine includes a series of small injections at the back of the neck. At recommended doses, it is unlikely to cause further issues though not impossible. I have found that these often help patients with the pain and that skipping them reduces the efficacy of the injections for migraine. I hope this helps.

Last updated on 12/20/2023