Showing posts with label plastic surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plastic surgery. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 January 2022

Speaking of Injections

   We face many complications and challenges during the current pandemic, but we should not overlook the very real concerns of those who need cosmetic surgery. Many of them had to attend holiday celebrations wearing their real lips, which were very noticeable under the mistletoe. Even those working alone at home had the wrinkles not covered by sweatpants, exposed on ZOOM. 

  Although you think you probably know all there is to know about COVID and Omicron, you may not be aware of the fact that, if you are in urgent need of forehead filler, you should wait a bit if you are also reluctantly giving some thought to getting a vaccine. It surely is a stressful time, particularly for wealthy Republican matrons. 

  You have good reasons, I’m sure, for not believing me, and you are tired of reading about this whole pandemic mess, so I will direct you directly to the sources. The first reference comes from a Republican one, so I am sure it has some substance and in it medical authorities are cited. 


“Botox Shot or Covid Boost? The Combo Causes Some Seasonal Wrinkles:

Doctors Advise Patients Seeking Cosmetic Treatments Not to Get a Vaccine Shot Two Weeks Before or After Their Procedure to Avoid the Risk of Swelling,” Alina Dizik, Wall Street Journal, Dec. 27, 2021. I think it is worth providing the first couple of sentences and then I will skip to the medical concerns:


Amanda Madison wanted to look fresh in time for her 50th birthday this winter. The Covid-19 vaccine booster threw a wrinkle into her plan.

She had time to add more volume to her lips and cheeks before her birthday bash, but needed to wait two weeks before and a further two weeks after getting her Covid booster shot before adding additional treatments to achieve "a fresh new start" for the New Year.

Spas and dermatology practices dealing with the holiday injections rush have an unexpected challenge this year: helping patients navigate Covid-19 boosters…


Many dermatologists advise clients to put time between vaccinations and injections of fillers -- gel-like substances used to plump up skin. In rare cases, mRNA vaccines have been linked to an inflammatory reaction to hyaluronic acid-based dermal fillers, the most common kind, according to case reports and research published in the Archives of Dermatological Research earlier this year. That can complicate holiday-season treatments, especially as Omicron increases the need for boosters.


People should wait two to three weeks between fillers and the Covid-19 vaccine to avoid a risk of swelling in areas where facial fillers were injected, says Gregory Greco, president-elect of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. He encourages patients not to put off the vaccine due to fillers. "We don't want people to delay boosters for fillers," he says.

 I was somewhat surprised that those interviewed apparently did not mind using their real names and that they are relatively young. I have since learned that there is a “Botox Boom”, partially propelled by youthful clients. Once again, directly to the source:

“Botox Sales Erupt With Younger Patients: Botox Sales Have Never Been Higher,” Bob Herman, AXIOS, Dec.28, 2021




The big picture: The pandemic drastically reduced the number of people getting cosmetic skin treatments. But the rollout of the COVID vaccines and a larger, younger crowd willing to try Botox injections have led to swelling demand in dermatology offices and medical spas.


By the numbers: U.S. sales of Botox — just the cosmetic version that is used to smooth out face wrinkles and not the version that is used to treat conditions like migraines and neck spasms — surpassed $1 billion in the first nine months of 2021, compared with $600 million in the first nine months of 2020.


Canadian Content

   Those of you who insist on more Canadian material, or those of you here who want your surgery done on home soil, should know that one of the sources in the WSJ is in our nation’s capital: 

The chances of unwanted side effects as a result of facial fillers and the vaccine are extremely small, says physician Alain Michon. He has seen two patients experience this type of swelling in his Ottawa-based aesthetic practice and published research in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology earlier this year. He estimates that less than 1% of patients experience vaccine-associated posttreatment swelling in areas where they have had injections.


The Bonus:

This is not directly related, although it does involve injections. I find puzzling, the Republican/conservative vaccine views which, I think, generally are not in favour of government mandates - or the government at all. On the other hand Republican Rick Perry, a former Governor of Texas (of all places), once mandated a vaccine for girls going into grade six, for a sexually transmitted virus that causes cervical cancer (by the way, the vaccine, Gardasil, works.) Opposition was met, partially because some felt that it might encourage sexual promiscuity. That may be true and it was probably particularly worrisome for those parents who had gotten plastic surgery for their daughters, because they wanted them to do well in beauty pageants and look better under the Friday night lights.


Post Script: Rick Perry still looks rather well. Meg Ryan, not so much.




Thursday, 4 March 2021

Periodical Ramblings (10)

 The Steven Lamazow Collection of American Periodicals




















   Dr. Steven Lomazow is a neurologist in New Jersey. He has been collecting magazines for almost fifty years and has over 80,000 of them, many of which are very rare. One can only imagine what his waiting room is like. 
   It is fitting that the tenth post in the series, "Periodical Ramblings" is turned over to someone who is really interested in magazines. Many of those he has collected are now being exhibited in The Grolier Club in New York city. You can visit virtually here: Magazines and The American Experience: Highlights From the Collection of Steven Lomazow, M.D. You can spend the rest of the day rambling among periodicals that range in subject from the avant garde and archery, to wars and wrestling. 




    If you want to spend more time browsing, then visit his major website: The Great American Magazine: The Periodical Collection of Steven Lamazow, M.D. There you can search thousands of periodicals and view images, and find links to other periodical-related resources. It is also worth looking at his older blog site: Magazine History: A Collector's Blog Documenting and Illustrating the History, Importance and the Joy of Collecting Magazines, 2008-2013. 


The Bonus:
   If you are interested in books and libraries, you should visit The Grolier Club and do some browsing. There are many interesting books and resources to be found and among the other exhibitions, there is this one about medical history books related to plastic surgery: The History of Plastic Surgery: "Much More Than Skin Deep" from the Collection of Douglas M. Monasebian, M.D.
   Speaking of medical history, Dr. Lomazov has yet another blog relating to the health of FDR: see FDR's Deadly Secret. 


Sources:
"How Magazines Helped Shape American History: Explore 300 Years of the Periodicals in an Encyclopedic Exhibition Opening at the Grolier Club in New York City,” Nora McGreevy, Smithsonian Magazine, Feb. 23, 2021.
"For national audiences, Lomazow and librarian Julie Carlsen have curated an extensive online exhibition, chronicling the magazine experience against the backdrop of American history on subjects ranging from the birth of democracy, to emancipation and the Civil War, the mid-century information age and the battle for civil rights, as well as a host of niche publications on celebrity, humor, art and baseball."

"What Are Magazines Good For," Nathan Heller, New Yorker, Feb. 16, 2021.
"The Grolier is a club for bibliophiles, but magazine nuts are admitted if their obsession reaches sufficiently crazed levels. (The home Lomazow shares with his wife and collaborator in collection, Suze Bienaimee, teems intimidatingly, some might say alarmingly, with bound volumes.) Lomazow strode over to one of eleven glass cases displaying his magazines, moving like a man whose number has been called at a busy deli counter. In winnowing down his collection to about two hundred issues for display—the show, in the exhibition gallery of the Grolier’s clubhouse, is open to the public by appointment—he focussed on those of acute historical importance."

The Series:

Here are the ones that have been posted so far in "Periodical Ramblings."
Periodical Ramblings (1) (The Sewanee Review)
Periodical Ramblings (3) (The Village Voice)
Periodical Ramblings (4) (The Wilson Quarterly)
Periodical Ramblings (5) ( The Prairie Schooner)
Periodical Ramblings (8) (Journals Devoted to a Single Author)
Periodical Ramblings (9) ( Arizona Highways)