In addition to wrinkles, crow's feet and cellulite, your saggy ears are now being targeted as an unsightly tell-tale sign of aging.  

Yet just like plastic surgery or beauty creams for wrinkles, there's a quick fix for your flabby lobes.

"Eartox," botox for your ears, is the next frontier in anti-aging treatments. Women ages 40 and up are having their ears injected with dermal fillers, such as hyaluronic acid, as a noninvasive way to have smooth and plump ears again, the Daily Mail reported.

"The lobe is injected with filler in several areas and inflates, looking ten times better immediately," Dr. Carolyn Berry, a U.K.-based cosmetic surgeon, told the Daily Mail. "The hydrophilic filler draws fluid into it, which causes further inflation and makes the tissue appear softer and more hydrated."

Ears aren't traditionally thought of as victims of time and gravity. But apparently our ears have always aged, becoming stretched out, saggy and thin.

"As we get older, our skin loses collagen and people tend to forget that the earlobes lose volume due to the natural aging process," Berry said.

New Jersey resident Angelique Foster, 50, suffered from thinning earlobes due to years of wearing "the heavy earrings of the '80s," ABC News reported.

"When you look at these younger people they have volume in their earlobes," she told the station. "A youthful face, youthful ears have volume."

She paid over $300 to have her ears injected with filler. Now, "my earrings look like they're sitting on a pillow," Foster said.

Some experts are concerned about the increasing popularity of noninvasive cosmetic procedures, namely the injection of "fillers" into different areas of the face, some of which are not FDA approved.

But other doctors swear by "eartox," which can be medically used to treat ringing in the ears and redness, ABC News reported.

"I've been doing it for years," said Dr. Norman Rowe, a New York City-based cosmetic surgeon. "Just more people are learning about the procedure now."