Abstract: Doxycycline injections improve the appearance of cosmetically significant lower eyelid festoons and malar edema, as well as of the jowls. The doxycycline is also useful for reducing edema of turbinates, the nasal concha or conchae shell-shaped networks of bones, vessels, and tissue within the nasal passageways that are responsible for warming, humidifying, and filtering the air as it is inhaled. The doxycline, in a concentration preferably of greater than 10 to 20 mg/ml, preferably in combination with a local anesthetic and optionally with a vasoconstrictor such as epinephrine and a pH buffering agent, is injected into the subcuticular space at the site of swelling. The high viscosity limits the spread of the doxycycline to the area to be treated. The resulting sclerosis prevents fluid accumulation. The doxycline also decreases swelling due to fat, by causing a decrease in lipomas.