Miracle H is the variant in DexLevo’s Miracle line that pairs fully solubilized PCL with added hyaluronic acid (HA). The idea is two timelines at once: HA for instant hydration and plumpness, and PCL to prompt your own collagen over the following weeks. It is a professional treatment, and the official guide is below.
How is Miracle H different from plain Miracle?
The base Miracle is a PCL collagen biostimulator: its whole job is to nudge your fibroblasts into making new collagen gradually. Miracle H keeps that and adds hyaluronic acid to the formula. The product guide lists Miracle H with the same collagen-stimulation benefits (Collagenesis, lifting, elasticity and density) plus one extra: instant hydration.
So the practical difference is timing. Plain Miracle is a slow burn, collagen built over weeks. Miracle H aims to give a visible freshness on day one from the HA, while the PCL works on the longer collagen story underneath. If you have read about hyaluronic acid skin boosters, the HA half of Miracle H plays a similar hydrating role.
Log Notes. This describes what the Miracle H formula contains and the general idea, not doses, depths, or technique. Those live in the official guide and are a trained professional’s call. Nothing here is medical advice, and this is not a do-it-yourself procedure.
Who tends to choose the hydration version?
People who want both an immediate refreshed look and the gradual firming. The HA gives a quick hydration boost that can make skin look dewier and a little plumper soon after treatment, which some people prefer over waiting out the slower collagen change alone. That is a preference, not a rule, and whether Miracle H suits your skin is a question for the professional administering it.
It is worth being honest about evidence here too. HA hydration is well established as an ingredient effect, while the specific Korean Miracle formulations are newer and less independently studied than the broader PCL collagen-stimulator and HA categories. Approval status also varies by country. Frame the benefits as reported, and let your own results be the judge.
It also helps to separate the two effects when you judge results. The hydration from HA can fade and be topped up over time, while the collagen change from PCL is the slower, more structural part people are usually paying for. A quick freshness in the first week is mostly the HA talking; a steadier firmness a couple of months in is the collagen, and only the second is the long game. Knowing which effect you are looking at on a given week keeps your expectations honest and your comparisons fair.
What’s worth tracking with Miracle H?
Two different timelines, which is exactly why a record helps. Note the immediate hydration effect in the first days, then watch firmness and texture over the following weeks as collagen catches up. A dated photo series separates the quick HA freshness from the slower structural change.
In Dosefi you can log each Miracle H session with its date and a photo, set the schedule for the next session in your course, and review your self-rated hydration, texture, and firmness over the cycle. Pairing that with the notes on plain Miracle helps you see what the HA actually added for you.
A grounded takeaway
Miracle H is the hyaluronic-acid version of the Miracle PCL line: quick hydration from HA, gradual collagen from PCL. Expect a fast freshness and a slower firming, keep a dated record of both, and leave suitability and the procedure to a licensed professional. The official guide is attached for reference.
Sources
- “Recommendations for volume augmentation and rejuvenation with a polycaprolactone-based collagen stimulator” (PMC). Peer-reviewed overview of how PCL-based collagen stimulators drive neocollagenesis.
