Vampire Facial®,
Facelift® &
Breastlift® Training
Three officially CMA-certified Vampire procedures in one intensive half-day session. PRP preparation, microneedling technique, HA filler integration, and breast injection protocol — with live patient practice throughout. Taught by Naomi Fayzulayev, FNP-C at Beso Wellness & Beauty in Phoenix.
Questions? Call 480-447-8166 or email [email protected]
Bundle with O-Shot® or P-Shot® training for additional PRP savings.
What each Vampire
procedure actually is
The Vampire procedures share a common foundation — PRP prepared from the patient's own blood — but each delivers it differently and targets a different clinical outcome. Understanding the distinction between them is essential for patient selection, consultation, and consent. This section covers what each procedure is, how it works, and who it's for.
The Vampire Facial combines microneedling — controlled dermal micro-injury using a precision needling device — with topical application of the patient's own PRP immediately after needling. The micro-channels created by the device allow PRP growth factors to penetrate into the dermis at a depth that topical application alone cannot achieve. The result is accelerated collagen synthesis and tissue remodeling that addresses skin texture, pore size, fine lines, and uneven pigmentation.
- Skin texture and pore refinement
- Fine lines and early rhytids
- Post-acne scarring (atrophic)
- Uneven skin tone and dullness
- General skin quality improvement in 30s–50s patients
- →Microneedling device selection — pen vs. stamp, needle length selection by treatment zone and indication
- →Pass technique, pressure, speed, and treatment density across face and décolletage zones
- →PRP application timing and technique — when to apply, how to distribute, how to maximize penetration
- →Topical anesthesia protocol — application, timing, and removal before treatment
- →Contraindications: active infection, Fitzpatrick considerations, anticoagulant use, keloid history
- →Post-treatment care and expected healing sequence — erythema, downtime, and patient communication
- →Complication recognition: post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, infection, prolonged erythema
The Vampire Facial is a highly marketable procedure — patient-facing photography shows dramatic before/after results, and the PRP differentiation resonates with wellness-oriented patients who want a regenerative alternative to chemical peels. It complements filler and neurotoxin services without competing with them, and naturally opens the conversation toward the Vampire Facelift for patients wanting volumetric improvement alongside texture work.
The Vampire Facelift is a two-component procedure: first, hyaluronic acid filler is used to restore volume and reshape the face according to the Harlow shape — a specific CMA protocol for facial structure that precedes PRP injection. Then, PRP is injected subdermally into the treated areas to stimulate growth factor activity in the newly volumized tissue. The filler provides immediate volumetric correction; the PRP addresses skin quality and tissue regeneration in the same appointment.
- Mid-face volume loss with concurrent skin quality decline
- Patients who want filler results enhanced with regenerative benefits
- Early to moderate facial aging in 40s–60s
- Patients seeking non-surgical facial reshaping with tissue quality improvement
- →The Harlow shape — the CMA facial reshaping protocol that guides HA filler placement in the Vampire Facelift
- →HA filler product selection for Vampire Facelift applications — which products are appropriate, which are not
- →Filler injection sequence, depth, and technique for mid-face, cheek, and periorbital regions per the Harlow protocol
- →PRP injection technique and depth for subdermal placement following filler — sequencing within the appointment
- →Vascular danger zones in the mid-face and periorbital region — arterial anatomy, aspiration, and safe injection planes
- →Patient selection — who benefits from the combined approach vs. filler alone vs. PRP alone
- →Consent for combined procedures — how to document and disclose both components appropriately
The Vampire Facelift includes HA filler injection. Providers without prior filler training should either have completed filler training before attending or should enroll in Beso's Filler Training course before or alongside this course. Naomi covers the Facelift-specific Harlow protocol in detail; the course does not replace foundational filler training.
The Vampire Breastlift is an intradermal and subdermal PRP injection into the breast and nipple-areolar complex for the purposes of improving breast shape, nipple sensitivity, and the appearance of the décolletage. It is not a volumizing procedure and does not replace implants or surgical augmentation — this distinction is critical for patient consultation and consent. Its strongest applications are nipple sensitivity enhancement, cleavage skin quality improvement, and as a complement to existing implants in patients experiencing changes in sensation or skin quality.
- Reduced nipple sensitivity (post-nursing, post-surgical, age-related)
- Cleavage and décolletage skin quality improvement
- Patients with implants experiencing changes in overlying skin or sensation
- Patients seeking non-surgical breast enhancement as an adjunct, not a replacement, for surgery
- →Breast and nipple-areolar anatomy relevant to injection — vascular supply, nerve distribution, glandular tissue planes
- →The CMA Vampire Breastlift injection protocol — injection points, depth, volume distribution, and technique for each zone
- →Topical anesthesia for breast procedures — application protocol, coverage area, timing
- →Patient selection criteria — who is and who is not a candidate, and how to have that conversation clearly
- →Contraindications: active breast infection, history of breast cancer, implant-related considerations, autoimmune conditions
- →Expectation management — what the procedure can and cannot achieve, and how to consent for subtle outcomes
- →Post-procedure care, follow-up protocol, and the repeat treatment schedule
The Vampire Breastlift has the most nuanced expectation management of the three procedures. Patient selection and consultation quality determine outcome satisfaction more than technique does. This module addresses the consultation framework in detail — including specific language for what to say when a patient asks "will it make my breasts bigger?" (no) or "will it fix sagging?" (no, not meaningfully).
One day. Three
complete protocols.
The morning session covers shared foundations — PRP science, preparation, and facial anatomy — before moving into procedure-specific technique for each of the three Vampire protocols. The afternoon is a supervised hands-on practicum with live consented patients. Every attendee practices PRP preparation and at least one live patient procedure under Naomi's direct supervision.
- What PRP is and what it isn't — platelet concentration, growth factor content, and what the science actually supports
- FDA-cleared centrifuge systems approved for PRP preparation — which systems Beso uses and why
- Blood draw protocol — volume, tube selection, anticoagulant considerations, and patient preparation
- Centrifuge settings for aesthetic vs. injection applications — spin speed, time, and separation technique
- Quality assessment — how to evaluate the prepared PRP before using it
- Activation protocols — to activate or not, when it matters, and CMA's current guidance
- Sterile handling, labeling, and time-to-use requirements for prepared PRP
PRP preparation is hands-on in the morning session — every attendee draws, spins, and prepares PRP before the afternoon practicum begins.
- Facial vascular anatomy — the danger zones for filler injection: angular artery, infraorbital artery, supratrochlear and supraorbital arteries
- Safe injection planes for mid-face filler — supraperiosteal, subcutaneous, and subdermal depths by zone
- The aging face — volume loss patterns, ligament relaxation, skin quality decline, and how the Harlow shape addresses them
- Lymphatic drainage of the face — why this matters for patient counseling on post-procedure swelling
- Skin layers and PRP penetration depths for topical vs. intradermal vs. subdermal delivery
- Device setup and sterility — single-use cartridge handling, tip attachment, and contamination prevention
- Needle depth selection by treatment zone: forehead, periorbital, mid-face, chin, neck, décolletage
- Treatment technique — pass direction, pressure consistency, overlap, and endpoint recognition
- PRP application timing — applying to pinpoint bleeding vs. applying as a serum channel medium
- Zones to approach with caution — periorbital and perioral techniques
- Treatment spacing and repeat protocol — minimum intervals, how many sessions for each indication
- Immediate post-treatment skin care, sun exposure, and makeup restrictions
Demonstrated by Naomi, then practiced by attendees on live consented patients in the afternoon session.
- The Harlow shape — CMA's defined protocol for the aesthetic outcome of the Vampire Facelift, and how it differs from general filler technique
- HA filler selection for Vampire Facelift applications — appropriate products and rheological considerations
- Injection sequence: filler first, then PRP — rationale and technique for each component
- Filler placement zones within the Harlow protocol — cheek, mid-face, and periorbital application points
- PRP injection depth and distribution across the treated area following filler placement
- Vascular occlusion recognition and hyaluronidase protocol — when to inject, dosing, and post-injection monitoring
- Combining Vampire Facial and Vampire Facelift in the same session — sequencing and patient selection
- Breast anatomy for the injection provider — glandular structure, Cooper's ligaments, vascular supply, and nipple innervation
- The CMA Breastlift injection map — defined injection points for subdermal PRP placement across the breast and nipple-areolar complex
- Topical anesthesia protocol for breast procedures — EMLA application area, timing, and coverage
- Needle selection and technique for intradermal vs. subdermal injection zones
- PRP volume distribution across the procedure — total volume per session and allocation by zone
- Special considerations for patients with implants — injection planes, depth limitations, and what to avoid
- Patient consultation script — how to discuss realistic outcomes and avoid overpromising
Expectation management is taught as a clinical skill in this module — not as a soft add-on. The providers who get the best patient satisfaction outcomes with the Breastlift are those who set expectations accurately before treatment, not those with the best technique.
- Adverse reactions to PRP — rare but real: inflammatory responses, infection, hematoma, and unexpected pain
- Vascular occlusion management for Facelift procedures — recognition, hyaluronidase protocol, and escalation criteria
- Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation after microneedling — prevention, patient risk factors, and management if it occurs
- Vasovagal response — recognition, patient positioning, management, and documentation
- Infection prevention across all three procedures — sterile field, skin prep, and post-procedure care instructions
- What your emergency kit must contain for these procedures and why
- Documentation for adverse events — chart notation, patient communication, and medical director notification
- Activating your CMA membership and directory listings for all three Vampire procedure sites
- Legal use of the Vampire Facial®, Vampire Facelift®, and Vampire Breastlift® trademarks in marketing and patient materials
- Pricing models in the Phoenix metro: Vampire Facial ($800–$1,400), Vampire Facelift ($1,500–$2,500), Vampire Breastlift ($1,500–$2,200)
- Package and series pricing strategies — why single-session pricing often undervalues the service
- Appointment workflow and room setup for PRP procedures — centrifuge placement, blood draw logistics, and sterile field management in a busy practice
- Combining Vampire procedures with complementary services: O-Shot®, P-Shot®, hormone optimization, and aesthetics
- Medical director standing order requirements for RNs offering Vampire procedures
Built for providers expanding
into regenerative aesthetics
Providers with an existing aesthetic practice adding a PRP-based regenerative service line. The Vampire Facial in particular integrates naturally into any medspa already offering microneedling or facial treatments — PRP upgrades the procedure and meaningfully increases the service fee.
Providers who have completed CMA sexual wellness training share the PRP preparation foundation with the Vampire procedures — the centrifuge technique, the blood draw protocol, and the quality control process are the same. The Vampire course builds directly on that investment and expands the PRP menu into aesthetics.
RNs can offer Vampire procedures under written standing orders from a qualified medical director. The course covers the standing order structure for each procedure. Ask about Beso's medical director services if you need one established before launch.
The Vampire brand is recognizable, patient-facing marketing is provided by CMA, and the procedures command premium pricing without requiring significant consumable cost beyond PRP supplies. For a medspa looking to add a differentiated, regenerative service with strong visual results, the Vampire procedures are a high-return addition.
This course is appropriate for licensed providers entering regenerative aesthetics for the first time as well as those adding Vampire procedures to an existing PRP or aesthetics practice.
- Active, unrestricted license (MD, DO, NP, PA, or RN)
- No prior PRP experience required — preparation is taught from the ground up
- Prior microneedling experience helpful but not required for the Facial component
- Prior filler experience required for the Facelift component — or concurrent enrollment in filler training
- Ability to perform or be supervised performing injections under your license
Vampire Facial®, Vampire Facelift®, and Vampire Breastlift® are federally trademarked procedure names owned by the Cellular Medicine Association. Practices that use these names in marketing without CMA certification are in violation of trademark law. This course includes the CMA certifications and 1-year membership required to operate as a fully compliant Vampire procedure provider.
Meet Naomi
Naomi Fayzulayev, FNP-C
Founder, Beso Wellness & Beauty · Board-Certified Family Nurse PractitionerNaomi founded Beso Wellness and Beauty to close the gap between clinical training and real-world practice — offering the kind of hands-on, small-group instruction she wished she had when she started. With over 15 years of clinical experience and deep roots in regenerative and aesthetic medicine, she brings active, practicing expertise to every course she teaches.
Her approach is integrative: combining conventional medicine with evidence-based wellness therapies to address root causes, not symptoms. As a Certified Trainer for the Cellular Medicine Association (CMA), Naomi personally trains other medical providers in advanced procedures including the O-Shot® and P-Shot® — a credential held by a small number of practitioners nationally. She holds advanced certifications in functional medicine, hormone optimization, and advanced medical aesthetics, and is known for her meticulous technique and the warm, patient-centered environment she creates in every training session.
She believes a well-trained provider is the foundation of a well-run practice. Every course she teaches reflects that: small cohorts, live patients, real feedback, and the business context to use the skills you leave with.
Clinical Practice
Per Cohort
Trainer
Active Practice
Common questions
Three CMA certifications.
One half day.
The Vampire Facial®, Facelift® & Breastlift® Training is $2,000 — comprehensive didactic and hands-on training across all three procedures, all supplies, official CMA certifications for each Vampire procedure, 1-year CMA membership with directory listings and trademark licenses, CME/CEU credits, and lunch. Cohorts are small and scheduled regularly. Bundle with O-Shot® or P-Shot® training for additional savings on the PRP service line.
Inquire & Enroll →