Aesthetic Institute of Oklahoma is a cosmetic surgery practice in Oklahoma City that combines board-certified surgical procedures (breast augmentation, facelift, liposuction) with injectable and laser treatments. The practice occupies a dedicated surgical facility and serves patients across central Oklahoma and the surrounding region who want both major reconstruction and maintenance treatments without changing providers.
The institute operates as a cosmetic surgery center rather than a dermatology practice or medspa. It holds surgical privileges and performs procedures requiring general anesthesia or IV sedation. The practice also offers non-surgical options like Botox, fillers, and laser skin resurfacing for patients who want preventive or adjunct work. This dual focus means a patient can have a facelift scheduled at the same location where they get touch-up injections three months later, without the referral pattern typical at hospitals or separate specialty clinics.
Surgical procedures include breast augmentation, breast lift, reduction, facelift, brow lift, eyelid surgery, rhinoplasty, liposuction, and abdominoplasty. Injectable services cover Botox, Restylane, Juvederm, and other fillers. Laser treatments address skin texture, pigmentation, and resurfacing.
Pricing varies widely by procedure complexity and extent. Breast augmentation ranges from $5,500 to $8,000 depending on implant type and placement. A full facelift typically falls between $8,000 and $12,000. Injectables and laser treatments charge per unit or per session; a single Botox session ranges from $400 to $800 depending on area and units needed. Confirm current pricing directly, as surgical costs shift with implant vendors and anesthesia rates.
Oklahoma City has competing cosmetic surgery practices, including independent surgeons and dermatology groups that offer cosmetic services. Dermatology-based practices like those at Integris or OU Medicine often emphasize non-surgical options and may refer surgical cases outside. Independent surgeons operate on a case-by-case basis and may not maintain a full range of injectables in-house. The Aesthetic Institute's advantage is consolidation: both surgical and non-surgical services under one roof with a single surgical facility eliminates coordination delays and reduces the need for external referrals. Choose a dermatology group if you prioritize medical-grade skincare and light chemical peels; choose an independent surgeon if you want a single named operator you can research individually. Choose the Aesthetic Institute if you want surgical reconstruction options plus ongoing non-surgical maintenance at the same location.
This practice works well for patients seeking major surgical work (implants, lift, or reshape) who also want injectable maintenance without switching providers. It suits people comfortable with a multi-surgeon practice where different specialists may handle different procedures. It does not suit patients who demand a single named surgeon for all care, or those seeking a dermatologist's full skin-health model (acne management, skin cancer screening, general medical dermatology). It is not an appropriate choice for emergency trauma or reconstruction outside cosmetic scope; that belongs at a hospital system like OU Medical Center or Integris.
A consultation typically includes photography, a detailed discussion of goals, and a recommendation for timing and technique. Patients review before-and-after galleries and discuss anesthesia options. For surgical procedures, a separate pre-operative appointment covers labs, medical clearance, and post-operative instructions. For injectables, the first visit is usually a single session with touch-up scheduling at two weeks if needed.
The practice is located in Oklahoma City and maintains standard office hours; confirm current hours and parking arrangements directly. Surgical cases require someone to drive you home after anesthesia; injectable appointments are walk-in-friendly for minor touch-ups. The facility holds appropriate surgical licensure and accreditation, which you can verify through the Oklahoma State Department of Health.
The Aesthetic Institute of Oklahoma fills a real gap: it lets patients consolidate cosmetic work instead of bouncing between a surgeon's office, a medspa, and a dermatologist across town. That efficiency matters in a city where drive times between specialists can add up.
