Category Archives: Injections

Quick shot replacing nip, tuck

 

Injectable use on the rise as a cheaper alternative to cosmetic surgery

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A good visit to your plastic surgeon to do some reasonable botox, or fillers is easy. Not something to be afraid of and more people are doing it. Good results are often seen, but on the other hand remember that you can only get so much, o…nly go so far with “minimal” treatments. Don’t expect great results with minimal invasive treatments of any kind. To get the best results, state of the art techniques are needed and these need some down time, have risks, cost money.
 
 

Injectable use on the rise as a cheaper alternative to cosmetic surgery

Article from The Chicago Tribune
By Ed Finkel, Special to the Tribune

July 20, 2011

 
Demand for minimally invasive cosmetic procedures showed a three-digit increase over the last decade, with Botox leading the way for those seeking to look younger or better.

As of last month, would-be patients can consider a new product that uses their own collagen cells, which are multiplied in a lab to create an injectable substance that smoothes out facial features. Injections typically cost a fraction of surgery and require much less recuperation time.

“It’s taking hold. People are doing (injections) a lot more frequently,” said John Bull, a plastic surgeon in Naperville. “People that are looking for a modest improvement with less down time and no scars typically want to have this done. The best candidates are people with early signs of aging and volume loss.”

Laurette Agee, 51, who is general manager of a McDonald’s in Aurora, was a patient of Bull’s. More than four years after losing her husband of 26 years, Agee was ready to come out of her shell but noticed the aging process taking hold.

She did not warm to the idea of plastic surgery, so starting in February she began receiving different types of injections in her cheeks, lips and along the sides of her nostrils.

“I catch men looking at me now in a different perspective. It makes me feel very good,” Agee said. “At my son’s wrestling meets, other moms were like, ‘Did you have something done, Laurette? You look so good.’ I have no shame in saying, ‘I did this, and this, and this.’”

In the last decade, minimally invasive procedures have skyrocketed in popularity, from 5.5 million performed in 2000 to 11.6 million in 2010 — a 110 percent increase, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. The best-known and most commonly used, Botox, jumped 584 percent.

Cosmetic surgical procedures were done 18 percent less often in 2010 than in 2000, with considerably larger drops in facelifts (65 percent), forehead lifts (57 percent), eyelid surgery (36 percent), chin augmentation (55 percent) and nose reshaping (35 percent), the society reports.

The new product, called laViv and approved by the Federal Drug Administration in late June, is what Chicago plastic surgeon Julius Few describes as “another tool in our chest.” It will take awhile to reach market and will be more expensive than other injectables, at least initially, Few said.

“It’s not going to be one of these things where people are going to put down their other options like Botox overnight,” he said. “As this continues to develop and is modified and enhanced as an application, hopefully it will approach a cost point similar to some of the other options and have a broader application. … My experience, given past history, is that the concept of using a patient’s own material and then enriching it is expensive.”

Thomas Mustoe, a plastic surgeon and professor of surgery at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, also expects laViv to be costly and expressed skepticism that it will necessarily work better than other nonsurgical options. He said the FDA approval indicates that the procedure is safe and can work, but patients should not necessarily conclude more.

“This is certainly significant that you have approval,” Mustoe said. “It is going to be simple to inject. But what is unknown is whether it is going to turn out to be better than other fillers. We’re still sorting out what is possible with a needle and an injection.”

Part of the reason for the popularity of injectables is the cost. Bull said they typically are no more than half the cost of surgery, which can run from $5,000 to $20,000, depending upon the areas of the face affected and technique used.

Few said some minimally invasive procedures can cost $3,000 or more. Botox is “a third or less of that,” he said, but needs to be redone every three to six months, while other products can last “on the order of years.” Plastic surgeons have been combining regimens to “get a result that is better than either (product) alone,” he said.

Susan P., 57, a Chicago resident and executive assistant who asked that her last name not be used, has been seeing Few for about four years. He has injected Botox and Restylane around her eyes, the sides of her nose and her forehead, and she estimates she spends about $3,500 per year.

“There’s no giveaway that I’m doing anything, which is really appreciated,” she said. “The longer you do this, the less often you have to go. There’s a cumulative effect.”

Agee estimates she spent a little less than $2,500 for a combination of Radiesse for her cheeks, Botox around her eyes and Juvederm for the sides of her nostrils. Though initially apprehensive about possible side effects, she said, she’s more than willing to repeat it.

“The process was a lot easier than what I anticipated,” she said. She had worried: “My God, what happens if I look like a freak? I work in public nine hours a day. I have like 50 employees under me. I’m going to look like Frankenstein.”

Mustoe said the key to avoiding such results is proper pacing of treatments and not overdoing it.

“Some patients look overly plumped up. There are limits to what you can do,” he said. “You only have to look at the folks in Hollywood to see that a series of (too many) small procedures can have a very strange effect.”

I Had a Facelift 4 Years Ago and Don’t Want Another One What Can I Do to Help Sagging?

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Sharla DeCelle in Las Vegas, NV asks:

I had a facelift approximately 4 years ago and have started to get the deep fowls around my mouth. I’m 60 years old and want to look vibrant for my age but do not want a another facelift. Are there other alternatives that will help the wrinkles and jowls?

Several options for nonsurgical facial rejuvenation:

If your areas of concern are the “deep frowns” around your mouth; so often the nasolabial folds and marionette lines around the mouth contribute to the sagging and contribute to the aged appearance.  Without doing “surgery”, injections into these areas, particularly with fat transfer or other materials can provide good resolution/good improvement, without undergoing a repeat facelift.  Specifically for wrinkles on the other hand; wrinkles are nicely treated with expert fractionated laser treatment.  If you are concerned about the sagging jowl; in some instances laser lipolysis can provide some tightening in this area although this has to be done with great expertise and care.

Nonetheless there are options to help rejuvenate the face that don’t entail or require facelift surgery.  But there is not a single procedure that will provide resolution for the areas you are concerned about, but a combination of these treatments can remedy the problem.

David Q. Santos, MD

Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon

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TLC for Skin Below the Chin

Article from The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery

If you’re a woman of a certain age, a glance at your exposed chest may show that you need more than a pushup bra. Women in their fifties begin to show wear in exposed areas. According to the June 2011 issue of More magazine, “Your skin below the chin needs TLC.”

Nora Ephron, author of “I Feel Bad About My Neck” is not alone. Necks are frequently left unprotected with moisturizer and sunscreen. But, if you’re starting to look jowly, there’s a surprising and effective treatment for loose skin under the jawline. A plastic surgeon or dermatologist can skillfully inject Botox into the vertical muscles under your jaw, relaxing them so that they loosen their downward pull on the skin. Cost is $250 and up.

You may also have loose neck skin, sadly but aptly referred to as “turkey neck.” Tighten up before Thanksgiving with Thermage, a skin tightening treatment that uses radio-frequency energy to heat the skin’s deepest layers and stimulate collagenproduction. Cost is about $1,200. You can also boost Thermage effects with Fraxel, a resurfacing laser. If your knees are also sagging, the same skin tighteners used on the neck are also used to lift and tighten this hard-to-fix area.

Your chest, which is so evident in today’s scooped out styles, may be striated with lines and discolored with mottling. Mottling can be treated with glycolic peel laced with retinoic acid for about $100 to $200 a session. Pigment-targeting lasers will take care of your brown spots in about 3 sessions at $350 each. A hyaluronic acidfiller, such as Restylane, could even be used to plump up the lines in your chest for about $500 a treatment.

To prevent further damage, slather your chest with sunscreen, especially in the frequently-exposed clavicle area.

 

Celebrity Plastic Surgery:  Lynne Curtin from the Real Housewives

Lynne Curtin from The Real Housewives

Are Steroid Injections Worth the Travel?

Photo from TheBeautyBrains.com

Brown123 asks:  

“I’m from Alabama. I got rhinoplasty performed in Flordia 2 & half months ago. My nose is still very swollen. My doc told me I can come back to Flordia & get steroid injections or I can go to a local doc. He advise me that he feels that he’s a better doc than my local doc. But Florida is 14 hours away & I really don’t want to travel that far for shots. But this is my face & money isn’t an option. But I was thinking how hard could it be to perform shots. do u think the local doc could do the job?”

After many facial type procedures, particularly facelift surgery, lumps and bumps and areas of bruising can be somewhat aesthetically unacceptable, particularly in the early postoperative period. This also occurs in the nasal region as well. Steroid injections are quite beneficial when utilized in a judicious and expert manner. Many plastic surgeons will utilize steroids in small doses, utilizing a small 30-gauge needle to improve the contour of areas that are still healing. There is a small risk with this endeavor, but generally speaking it is quite safe in expert hands. I personally perform thousands of injections with essentially no untoward effects. But nonetheless there is more to assessment of the areas that comes with a doctor visit, so traveling is worth it in regards to assessment of the areas of healing, as well as the need for injections. So often I will strongly urge my patients to follow-up even if it does mean a several hour journey. Essentially it is not just for an injection, it is also for assessment and for understanding of where we stand on the healing process and the need for revision which occurs on an infrequent basis.
David Q. Santos, MD

Seattle Facial Plastic Surgeon
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