Miracle is a Korean meso-injectable from DexLevo built on fully solubilized polycaprolactone (PCL), a biodegradable polymer that prompts your own skin to make new collagen over time. People reach for it for gradual firmness and a lifted look. It is placed by a trained professional, and the official guide is below for your records.
What is Miracle, and what is “solubilized PCL”?
PCL (polycaprolactone) is a biodegradable polymer that has long been used in medical sutures and dissolvable threads. Most PCL collagen stimulators are tiny microspheres suspended in a gel. Miracle’s pitch, branded as CESABP technology and “Collagenesis,” is that its PCL is fully solubilized, a liquid rather than a particle suspension, so it spreads smoothly before the collagen-building process begins.
In plain terms: it is not a filler that adds volume by sitting under the skin. It is a biostimulator, meaning its job is to nudge your fibroblasts (the cells that make collagen) into producing more of their own. That is why the results are described as gradual rather than instant.
Log Notes. This explains what Miracle is and the general science, not how to use it. It gives no doses, depths, injection points, or technique, all of which live in the official guide and belong to a trained professional. Nothing here is medical advice, and this is not a do-it-yourself procedure.
How does PCL stimulate collagen?
By way of a controlled, gentle repair response. Published work on polycaprolactone-based collagen stimulators describes neocollagenesis: as the biodegradable polymer is slowly broken down, it signals fibroblasts to lay down new collagen, gradually thickening the dermis and improving elasticity over weeks to months. Miracle’s own materials describe the same arc, a shift toward a firmer “3D matrix” of collagen and a lifted look.
Two honest caveats. First, most of this evidence is for PCL biostimulators as a category; specific Korean products like Miracle are newer and less independently studied. Second, regulatory status varies by country, and a product available in one market may not be approved in another. Treat reported benefits as “studied for the ingredient class,” not guaranteed for you.
What should you expect, and what’s worth tracking?
Patience and a record. Because collagen builds slowly, the interesting changes show up over a course of sessions and the months after, not the day of treatment. That makes a dated log far more useful than memory. Photograph the same way each time, note each session, and watch firmness and texture over a real timeline.
Biostimulator results also tend to be cumulative across a planned course, then maintained with occasional top-ups, so the comparison that matters is month over month, not week to week. Setting expectations this way protects you from two common traps: declaring it a miracle after a single fresh-faced week, or giving up before collagen has had the time it needs to build.
This is exactly the kind of course Dosefi is built to track: you add Miracle as a treatment, log each session with its date and a photo, and the schedule shows when the next one is due, while your self-rated skin trends build a picture over the cycle. If you also use other collagen-focused approaches, our notes on peptides for skin and the variants Miracle H and Miracle L round out the picture.
A grounded takeaway
Miracle is a fully-solubilized PCL biostimulator designed to coax your own collagen back over time, not a quick volumizing filler. Expect gradual change, keep a dated record, and leave candidacy and the procedure itself to a licensed professional. The official product guide is attached for your own 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.
