Sunday, January 4, 2009
Longer Eyelashes, with medicine
The makers of Botox have just gotten FDA approval for a medication that will grow longer, darker, thicker eyelashes. Once a day, less than four months = naturally long dark lashes.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Say "CHEESE!"
I need to get our Botox patients to frown for before photos and saying "cheese" is not the answer. Over the years I've asked people to think of many things to get the response I need. The most consistent success I've had was saying "Think of Politics". That almost always gets me a frown, until now. Ever since the conventions and the choice of running mates I get grins, smirks, smiles or outright laughter. This seems to be the reaction across the political spectrum. So now, I'm frowning. And just when I thought politics could be a useful tool...
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Biden,
botox,
GOP convention,
Sarah Palin,
think of politics
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
is it REALLY Botox?
You'd think that after the problems Florida had a few years ago that this kind of thing would not still be happening, but it is. We've had patients describe treatments that didn't sound like the Botox reconstitution was done correctly and some with results that don't make sense from our experience with the product. We've also seen prices that are below what Allergan charges for the product (and no, they don't discount it to anyone!). We've heard of solicitations from Canadian companies (next to China, we've been told Canada is one of the world's largest counterfeiter of products) to sell Botox at discounted prices. They say "it's really made by Allergan just with different labeling". Like they say, you've got to trust your source and pay the price.
Don't Get Burned Using Sunscreen
I see it everyday, here in Florida. Patients who years ago swore off their ‘baby oil and iodine’ days, who whisper about “laying out” in the sun as if it deserves a confessional…
Yet, they come in perplexed, brown and red, with visible strap marks and brown splotches where the sun has kissed them too much. “I don’t understand. I used a 70.”
Aha! And that’s the problem! Although the F.D.A. has allowed SPFs to be rated up to 30+, it can’t squelch the power of marketing. The marketing Gods want us to believe that an SPF of 70 is twice as good as an SPF of 30. It’s NOT.
And no sunscreen can live up to its SPF (Sun Protection Factor) unless YOU reapply, reapply, reapply.
Let’s go back to how S.P.F. is determined. In a lab, a thick coating of sunscreen (2 mg per square centimeter of skin) is applied. This is a HUGE amount. In real life, most of us use only ½ to 1/4th of this. The skin is exposed to UV radiation, and observed for the tiniest flush of pink. The dose of radiation that turns the skin pink is the MED (minimal erythema dose.) ‘Erythema’, you see, is the medical term for ‘redness.’
So, if a person’s skin turns pink after 10 minutes, then an SPF of 15 should prevent this from happening for 10 X 15 = 150 minutes.
The problem is, this is a LAB, not a BEACH. Some people who just start turning pink in 10 minutes at the beach at 10 a.m. will be roasted lobsters in the same 10 minutes at 1 p.m.
Meanwhile, in real life, other things are happening. You are sweating, and the sun itself is breaking down your sunscreen. Worse, scientists now believe that even more esoteric things are happening—that the chemical sunscreens absorbing the sun’s energy are getting into your skin. When they are overburdened by the energy they can no longer absorb, they release this energy in the form of free radicals right into your skin, causing cancer.
But the good news is, ALL of these problems are prevented by reapplying!
So, I see scorched people who put their SPF 70 on only once. Worse, they’ve been fooled into thinking that a 70 is twice as good as a 30. An SPF of 30 blocks 5% more UVB than an SPF of 15. An SPF of 50 blocks only 1% more than an SPF of 30. Don’t be fooled by marketing. Most Caucasians in Florida should be using a 30+.
The next comment I hear form the “accidentally tanned Floridian” is, “Of course I use sunscreen, when I go out in the sun.” These people are usually quite fit, sporting a tank top and shorts. They’ve had a long day of dropping the kids off, buying groceries, and other errands…without applying sunscreen. How do they do this without “going out in the sun?” We don’t have subways in Florida.
What about UVA? The SPF is designed to rate protection against UVB—the burning rays. And for years, only UVB was vilified for causing cancer—by causing Thymine bases in DNA to cross link. Well, now UVA, able to penetrate glass (think about driving) may cause cancer too, by penetrating deeper into the skin and generating free radicals.
Well, the FDA will soon be adding a four-star rating system to reflect UVA protection. Until then, the words “Broad Spectrum” let you know that the product offers some UVA protection. And, it is essentially impossible to have an SPF of 30+ without some UVA protection.
So, go to the beach…or shopping. But use SPF 30+ 15-30 minutes before sun exposure. Reapply either 15-30 minutes after arrival or after any activities (swimming, sweating.) Reapply again before 2 hours have elapsed. And don’t forget the broad-brimmed hat. And remember to use sunscreen under the swimsuit—don’t stop at the fabric edges. That’s how you don’t get burned using sunscreen.
Diane Cantrell, M.D.
Yet, they come in perplexed, brown and red, with visible strap marks and brown splotches where the sun has kissed them too much. “I don’t understand. I used a 70.”
Aha! And that’s the problem! Although the F.D.A. has allowed SPFs to be rated up to 30+, it can’t squelch the power of marketing. The marketing Gods want us to believe that an SPF of 70 is twice as good as an SPF of 30. It’s NOT.
And no sunscreen can live up to its SPF (Sun Protection Factor) unless YOU reapply, reapply, reapply.
Let’s go back to how S.P.F. is determined. In a lab, a thick coating of sunscreen (2 mg per square centimeter of skin) is applied. This is a HUGE amount. In real life, most of us use only ½ to 1/4th of this. The skin is exposed to UV radiation, and observed for the tiniest flush of pink. The dose of radiation that turns the skin pink is the MED (minimal erythema dose.) ‘Erythema’, you see, is the medical term for ‘redness.’
So, if a person’s skin turns pink after 10 minutes, then an SPF of 15 should prevent this from happening for 10 X 15 = 150 minutes.
The problem is, this is a LAB, not a BEACH. Some people who just start turning pink in 10 minutes at the beach at 10 a.m. will be roasted lobsters in the same 10 minutes at 1 p.m.
Meanwhile, in real life, other things are happening. You are sweating, and the sun itself is breaking down your sunscreen. Worse, scientists now believe that even more esoteric things are happening—that the chemical sunscreens absorbing the sun’s energy are getting into your skin. When they are overburdened by the energy they can no longer absorb, they release this energy in the form of free radicals right into your skin, causing cancer.
But the good news is, ALL of these problems are prevented by reapplying!
So, I see scorched people who put their SPF 70 on only once. Worse, they’ve been fooled into thinking that a 70 is twice as good as a 30. An SPF of 30 blocks 5% more UVB than an SPF of 15. An SPF of 50 blocks only 1% more than an SPF of 30. Don’t be fooled by marketing. Most Caucasians in Florida should be using a 30+.
The next comment I hear form the “accidentally tanned Floridian” is, “Of course I use sunscreen, when I go out in the sun.” These people are usually quite fit, sporting a tank top and shorts. They’ve had a long day of dropping the kids off, buying groceries, and other errands…without applying sunscreen. How do they do this without “going out in the sun?” We don’t have subways in Florida.
What about UVA? The SPF is designed to rate protection against UVB—the burning rays. And for years, only UVB was vilified for causing cancer—by causing Thymine bases in DNA to cross link. Well, now UVA, able to penetrate glass (think about driving) may cause cancer too, by penetrating deeper into the skin and generating free radicals.
Well, the FDA will soon be adding a four-star rating system to reflect UVA protection. Until then, the words “Broad Spectrum” let you know that the product offers some UVA protection. And, it is essentially impossible to have an SPF of 30+ without some UVA protection.
So, go to the beach…or shopping. But use SPF 30+ 15-30 minutes before sun exposure. Reapply either 15-30 minutes after arrival or after any activities (swimming, sweating.) Reapply again before 2 hours have elapsed. And don’t forget the broad-brimmed hat. And remember to use sunscreen under the swimsuit—don’t stop at the fabric edges. That’s how you don’t get burned using sunscreen.
Diane Cantrell, M.D.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Feel Beautiful... Feel Secure!
Welcome to Med Spa Plus. We believe that everyone is entitled to look and feel their best, regardless of age. Our practice, located in Oviedo, offers the latest in laser and cosmetic surgery procedures in a safe, caring environment. Dr. Diane Cantrell, M.D. is a Board Certified Physician specializing in Non-Surgical Cosmetic procedures and Anti-Aging Medicine. Our primary focus is providing you with the safest, least invasive, most cost effective procedures available to achieve your goals.
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