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Old January 21st, 2008, 05:48 AM posted to alt.guitar,alt.drugs.hard,rec.sport.pro-wrestling,sci.med,alt.support.diet
UNIT 731
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Default LA LIPO IN LESS THAN A HOUR - NEW FAD

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programme...ondent/7171672
..stm

Year-round tan, legs up to here. A Bond-girl body which had clearly been
the regular recipient of sea-salt wraps and expensive exfoliations.

Yet CC's body was not quite the shape she wanted it to be.

A niggling layer of fat - virtually undetectable to the naked eye -
clung stubbornly to her inner thigh, refusing to yield even in the face
of a daily exercise routine rigorous enough to bring a Greek god to his
knees.

Like many women in Los Angeles, CC demonstrates the sort of devotion to
physical perfection which in some other parts of the world would be seen
as obsessive.

In her case peer pressure undoubtedly plays a part. As host of her own
internet TV show she mixes it with some of the most glamorous people on
the planet.

A fixture at the very poshest parties and premieres, there is hardly a
red carpet in town which has yet to cushion CC's perfectly pedicured
feet.

'The new Botox'

Yet when the time came for the love handles to leave she wavered. Uneasy
about going under the knife she shopped around only to discover there
was another option, a procedure called lipodissolve.


Lipodissolve represents a potential goldmine for doctors, which may
explain why clinics are sprouting up faster than Starbucks
Once injected into the fat a chemical known as PCDC, which is derived
from soya bean, breaks the fat down.

After a short series of injections, a few weeks apart, those festively
plump areas are soon a thing of the past.

Cosmetic surgeons call it a "miracle cure," yet the treatment has been
banned in several countries (including the UK) and has yet to gain
regulatory approval here in the US.

"It's the new Botox," CC told me excitedly as a Beverly Hills doctor
discharged a syringe of the magic potion into the perfectly brown flesh
of her upper right thigh.

Botox, I need not remind you, is a derivative of botulism. A toxin used
to paralyse muscles in the face, freeze frown lines, and iron out
wrinkles.

It is now the most popular non-surgical procedure in America. Health
regulators took a while to get enthused about that as well. Something to
do with injecting a deadly toxin into your body - I can't imagine why.

Yet amongst the rich and the famous, Botox is now de rigueur. The little
vial of poison has become a latter day elixir, hailed by Beverly Hills
"ladies who lunch" as a veritable fountain of youth.

'Lunchtime lipo'

Some believe lipodissolve could go the same way. It is a non-invasive
procedure so there are neither cuts nor stitches to mar the body
beautiful.

The lipodissolve treatment
Critics of the treatment question what happens to the dissolved fat
The injection takes about 15 minutes (hence its nickname 'lunchtime
lipo') and unlike those old-fashioned methods of losing weight - such as
dieting and exercise - the results are evident within a matter of days.

The only side effects, so it is said, are a slight swelling and numbness
around the area where the needle pricked the flesh.

Try telling all that to the growing number of women who report problems
with lipodissolve.

One, who wanted to lose some fat remaining from a pregnancy, reportedly
developed a lump the size of a tennis ball after the treatment led to an
infection in her abdomen.

It took a week in hospital to recover, and her stomach is now the shape
of a spoon.

Another person who does not have a good word to say about lipodissolve
is Dr Brian Kinney of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

A medical man of the old school he nonetheless proudly showed off his
assistant's nose job ("all my own work") before rounding on the latest
unproven practice in his profession.

Health risks

The greatest concern is - what happened to the fat once it was
dissolved?

Did it somehow find its way to the kidneys and thence into the urine? Or
meander into the liver only to be metabolised? Or somehow wriggle into
the muscles only to be burned up?

Nobody who carried out the procedure seemed to know.

"There's a lot of basic science that still needs to be done," Dr Kinney
told me. "The danger is that instead of going out looking more beautiful
the patient goes out maimed or disfigured."

In a country suffering an obesity epidemic, the notion of an elite group
spending thousands of dollars fine-tuning their fat seems self-indulgent
to say the least.

Lipodissolve represents a potential goldmine for doctors, which may
explain why clinics are sprouting up faster than Starbucks coffee shops.

Yet patients like CC say the results are amazing and contend the
treatment represents the perfect answer for those who are not able or
simply do not have the time to lose weight naturally.

With a flash of those perfectly white teeth she told me she would be
back for another injection in a few weeks time.

--
Rob Cypher
robcypher.livejournal.com
YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED - RESISTANCE IS FUTILE