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Cheeky Study Finds
Beauty Secret In Cadavers
Pushing the boundaries of science, researchers
injected dye and latex into 14 cadavers to find the boundaries of
four deeply seated facial fat compartments. All in the interest
of making you more beautiful, of course.
The research revealed that volume loss in those
fat compartments results in the hollow look of aging, the researchers
say.
So, could pumping up those compartments make you
look like, say, Angelina Jolie?
"Cheeks are vital to what we consider beautiful
— from chubby-cheeked infants to Hollywood stars like Angelina
Jolie," said study co-author Joel Pessa of University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center. "This research breaks new ground
by identifying the boundaries of specific fat compartments that
are key to facial rejuvenation involving the cheeks, and as a consequence,
the overall look of the face."
But wait, there's more.
"Restoring these compartments also improves
volume loss under the eyes, helps eliminate lines around the nose
and mouth and gives more curve to the upper lip, all of which restore
a more youthful appearance to the face," according to a statement
from the center.
By now, you're either looking for a place to sign
up or you are chuckling at the cheekiness of it all.
But the study is part of a booming business in
"injectable fillers," the artificial and sometimes natural
stuff that "can plump thin lips, enhance shallow contours,
soften facial creases and wrinkles, or improve the appearance of
recessed scars," according to the American Society of Plastic
Surgeons (ASPS).
The study is detailed in the June issue of Plastic
and Reconstructive Surgery.
Fat is big these days, and getting bigger. Plastic
surgeons did 47,000 fat injections in 2007 and 1.1 million injections
with "hyaluronic acid," which the ASPS says is "a
natural substance found in our bodies that is well suited to plump
thin lips and fill facial creases." It's in skin, cartilage
and other tissue, and the FDA approves it as an injectable filler.
Among the targets for all this plumping are men,
who, according to a December 2007 study in the journal Dermatologic
Therapy, are "more timid" about procedures for facial
rejuvenation. "Only with the advent of minimally invasive procedures
such as Botox and fillers have men begun to participate in cosmetic
treatments," the researchers of that study wrote. What do men
want with injectable fillers? Wrinkle ablation, volumization and
sculpting facial contours.
Here comes the gross part:
These newly explored fat cheek compartments could
change how plastic surgery is done if your desire is to "correct
facial aging," assuming you're not yet a cadaver.
"No longer do we remove fat without pre-op
analysis or merely lift the cheek," explained UT's Rod Rohrich,
lead author of the study. "We must now lift and fill the face
to restore a natural youthful, unoperated appearance."
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com.
Date created: Aug 2008
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