Xeotox is a botulinum toxin type A from Secretpharm in South Korea, sold as a 100-unit vial. The manufacturer describes it as a purified neurotoxin complex of about 900 kDa that is freeze-dried and dissolves clear. It is administered by a trained professional, and the official guide is below for your records.

What is Xeotox, and who makes it?

Xeotox is a botulinum toxin type A produced by Secretpharm, a South Korean company, in a 100-unit vial. The maker describes it as a purified neurotoxin complex with a molecular weight of about 900 kDa. It is freeze-dried and reported to dissolve clear once prepared by a professional.

Secretpharm lists several product specifications: roughly 99% purity, a pH of about 6.0, a 36-month shelf life, refrigerated storage, and a potency assay range of 87 to 115%. Read those as the manufacturer’s stated figures, not independently verified claims. The 900 kDa complete-complex framing is the same general design discussed for Puritox, and it contrasts with the complex-free approach of Coretox.

Log Notes. This explains what Xeotox is and the general science, not how to use it. It gives no doses, units, dilution, injection points, depth, or frequency, all of which live in the official guide and belong to a licensed professional. Nothing here is medical advice, and this is not a do-it-yourself procedure.

How does botulinum toxin type A work?

It temporarily quiets targeted muscle activity. Botulinum toxin type A works by blocking the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction, the chemical signal that tells a muscle to contract. Published pharmacology reviews describe this mechanism of botulinum toxin type A in detail: with that signal interrupted, the treated muscle relaxes for a period, then gradually recovers as nerve signaling returns.

One honest note on Xeotox specifically. It is less independently studied than the largest names, and it is not FDA-approved. Specs like purity percentage, pH, and shelf life describe the product on paper; they are useful for your records, but they are not a promise of how it will perform for you. That judgment belongs to a professional.

It is worth seeing the bigger picture. South Korea exports a wide range of botulinum toxin brands, and a detailed spec sheet, like the one Secretpharm publishes, is a normal part of how these products are presented. A thorough spec sheet is reassuring, but it is not the same as a deep base of independent research. Brand recognition and outside study often do not line up, and a brand can carry precise figures while its published evidence stays thin. That is common in this category and is not a verdict on safety. It simply underlines that the product choice rightly belongs to the professional treating you.

What should you expect, and what is worth tracking?

A clear timeline and a steady record. Because the muscle-relaxing effect builds over days and then fades over weeks to months, the useful comparison is session to session, not day to day. A dated log beats memory here. If you are new to the category, our overview of what Botox can do sets realistic expectations.

So what is worth recording? Start with how long results last for you. Note the date you first noticed onset and the date the effect began to ease, and keep those dates across cycles. Your own duration figure tells you more than any number on a spec sheet.

Photos help when you keep them consistent. Use the same light, the same angle, and the same expression each time, and pair a neutral shot with a mid-expression one for a fair before-and-after. Add a self-rating, one to five, on how satisfied you felt just before your next appointment, taken at the same point each cycle so the scores stay comparable.

Always note the exact product and brand used. If you later switch from Xeotox to a different toxin, those earlier notes make the next session a true comparison instead of a guess about what changed.

This is the kind of cycle Dosefi is built to track. You add Xeotox as a treatment, log each session with its date and a photo, set a reminder for when results typically start to ease, and let your self-rated notes build a picture over time. For another Korean toxin with different positioning, see our post on Botulax.

A grounded takeaway

Xeotox is Secretpharm’s purified 900 kDa botulinum toxin type A, freeze-dried with a 36-month stated shelf life and a published spec sheet. It is less independently studied and not FDA-approved, so treat its figures as the manufacturer’s framing. Keep a dated record, and leave candidacy, dosing, and the procedure itself to a licensed professional. The official guide is attached for your reference.

Sources