Archive for the ‘Non-surgical aesthetic enhancement’ Category

LIP RESTORATION

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

LIP RESTORATION

Richard M. Foxx, M.D.

As if lips weren’t on our minds enough they jump out at you from countless ads, on the amazing faces of stars from Angelina to Scarlett, and in certain places large deep red lips stare out at you from billboards, newspaper ads, and even on car doors.

No wonder we miss them when they start to leave.

With the passage of time lips lose volume, get smaller and thinner. Eventually the skin around the lips begins to fold up and crinkle and lines began to radiate away from the borders creating the perfect place for lipstick to bleed into. That wonderful Cupid’s bow under the nose, the place where the angel touches you just before you are born, disappears and the compound curve that makes up a youthful lip gives way to a flat line.

If you dreamed there might be an antidote, your dreams have come true. There is now a virtual cornucopia of products, called dermal fillers, that can plump lips and restore lost volume, erase the radial lines and recreate some of the youthful anatomy. But here, as in almost no other aesthetic treatment, it is really caveat emptor, let the buyer beware.

Lips are about volume, to be sure, but more importantly they are about shape. Lips that are enhanced with filler should meet certain definable proportions and should definitely not wind up looking like a trout pout.

For starters, the lower lip must be 1.6 times larger than the upper lip. The area above upper lip should not protrude like a duck’s bill and the rolled edge that marks the border between the lip and the skin of the face should be recreated in a subtle way. And as Cupid’s bow is the defining aesthetic of the upper lip, it should be enhanced naturally, without exaggeration.

To make all of this happen you need a doctor whose aesthetic sense matches yours, an artist rather than a technician, and sometimes the only way to find one is to ask, discreetly, when you see someone suddenly looking more youthful. Chances are you won’t be aware of a good lip correction otherwise. You don’t want lips that flash “I’ve been done” from a mile away and need their own Zip Code.

Ask questions of your doctor. World-renowned Arnold Klein, MD, who holds a dermatology chair in his name at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine spends about 45 minutes on a lip correction and advises patients to be wary of doctors who allot much less time than that.

And stay away from permanent fillers such as silicone or Artecoll in favor of hyaluronic acid fillers such as Juvederm™ or Restylane®.

Properly done, a lip augmentation can be exquisite, the perfect coda to the maturing face.

Doctor Foxx is the Founder and Medical Director of The Medical and Skin Spa in Indian Wells, CA, at Hyatt Grand Champions Resort.  He may be reached at drfoxx@medicalandskinspa.com or at 760-674-4106

THE NEW, NEW FACE

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

THE NEW NEW FACE

Richard M. Foxx, MD

NEW YORK magazine enjoys an often well-deserved reputation as one of the major arbiters of “the look” so when they write a cover story on one of the latest trends in aesthetics you tend to give it more than a quick read. The lead article in their August 11, 2008 issue, called “About-Face,” deals with the judicious and careful use of fillers, lasers, and BOTOX® to create a face of “indeterminate age.”

Recreating the face of your youth by placing fillers in the hollows under the eyes, the so-called “tear troughs,” is clearly the solution to the gauntness left by the changing anatomy of the bony skeleton and the decrease in collagen and elastin that occurs with advancing years. Think Madonna or Kim Cattrall (although no one is really saying what they had done).

Calling the result “The New New Face” the article summarizes the philosophy of famed NYC dermatologist Pat Wexler, MD, and other noted NYC cosmetic derms in saying: “The New New Face is really your old face.” According to Doctor Wexler “…you need volume to keep a face looking young.” This is, in fact, what I have been doing here at The Medical and Skin Spa, lecturing about, and teaching other doctors for some time.

Madonna’s dermatologist, Frederick Brandt, MD, talks about the aging face as losing “youthful convexities.” And the convexities, he goes on to say: “are the fullness and the roundness. A facelift…doesn’t do anything for volume loss, and a lot of people still don’t understand this concept.”

An idea whose time has long-since come, tear trough filling, or mid-face plumping, is exactly what was described in the last issue of NEW BEAUTY.

This kind of what is euphemistically referred to as a “correction” was not really possible until the advent of really long-lasting fillers such as RADIESSE®. In the right hands, the improvements that can be effected with this long-lasting product (that will last far more than a year) are truly amazing. When I lecture on it or train doctors one-on-one, I often refer to “the WOW factor” because patients looking into a mirror for the first time after the treatment is performed are usually compelled to say some variation of that.

The article goes on to discuss what they call “the overinflated-lip craze.” Their conclusion is that it is finally over. Thank goodness. It was over for me even before it took off. My constant belief is that true beauty come from balancing all of the elements of the face: general health, supplements, good product use, and judicious use of the magic treatments at our disposal.

More on overinflated-lips in articles to come.

Doctor Foxx is the Founder and Medical Director of The Medical and Skin Spa in Indian Wells, CA, at Hyatt Grand Champions Resort.  He may be reached at drfoxx@medicalandskinspa.com or at 760-674-4106