Friday, June 24, 2011

"Vampire Face Lifts": Selphyl injections of your blood platelets

In fact, it is not surgery, a procedure in the office which carries blood from the arm, then spun in a Centrifuge to separate out platelets. They are then injected in your face, hoping to stimulate new collagen production. Selphyl, that regime is called, arrived the flourishing ansiktsbehandling-regeneration market in 2009 and is now used by about 300 doctors across the country in the name of beauty, says Sanjay Batra, Managing Director of aesthetic factors which produce Selphyl system.

This year has "Vampire facelift" been promoted on "The Rachael Ray Show" and "doctor." It has also been broadcast in more than a dozen local news programs, some of which are presented unproved claim that results will last two years.

Dr. Drew Ordon, one of the hosts of "The doctor" and targeting plastic surgeon, gushed on air,-vampires have moved into plastic surgery, too, and I am one of them, the patient in his segment had also recently her own fat in her face to the Oh, so it was not clear that platelets had anything to do with her fresher look. (Not to be stopped the audience's applause.)

Eerie sounds, some procedure that patients prefer the idea of using their own blood rather than a Neurotoxin or synthetic filler to rejuvenate their faces. "We all want to see better," said Joan Sarlo, 56, who underwent a Selphyl "vamp-lifting", performed by Dr. Lisa a. Zdinak, Manhattan-based doctor whose specialty is ophthalmic plastic surgery. But the "less unnatural better," Ms. Sarlo said. "What can be better than your own blood?"

Some doctors say that Fillers from the body is less likely to cause irregularities and knocks the agenda areas than synthetic as Sculptra aesthetic. But now, it is difficult to talk about "Platelet-Rich fibrin matrix" or P.R.F.M. (the medical term for the Golden-hued platelets Selphyl extract), is an effective filler for hollowed-out cheeks and wrinkles.

Dr. Anthony p. Sclafani, Director of facial plastic surgery at New York eye and Ear Infirmary, said he has seen the effects of P.R.F.M. on revivifying cosmetic patients last for more than a year — sometimes 18-24 months. (Dr. Sclafani is a paid consultant for aesthetic elements, and most of his research on Selphyl has been funded by the company.)

But no national clinical trial has been done to prove such claims. "There is simply no objective data out there to justify the claim of two years," Dr. Jeffrey m. Kenkel, specialising in plastic surgeon and spokesman for the physicians Coalition for injectable safety, wrote in an e-mail message.

Dr. Phil Haeck, Chairman of the American Society of plastic surgeons, plagued by a lack of research proving the effect of Selphyl, which costs $ 900 to $ 1,500 for a procedure which takes less than half an hour. "There are no scientific studies, the only personal certificates," he said, adding that he thinks that "celebrate" the concept is so obsolete that bloodletting to cure the disease. "This is another gimmick that people use to make themselves stand out on the Internet in a true everyone part of medicine".

In addition, doctors and consumers are not clear to which Selphyl account in F.D.A. Focus family medicine physician who works by refining MediSpa in Johnson City, Tenn., tells consumers that Selphyl is in a YouTube video with Dr. John Argerson, a "recently approved F.D.A. fillers" for the nose to lip creases. And in an article in the December 2009 in dermatology times, a trade publication, Dr. Ranella Hirsch, dermatologist, said Selphyl is "a new F.D.A. approved dermal absorption fillers." This week, Dr. Hirsch, who do not use Selphyl in their practice, said she could not explain why she misspoke, adding to an e-mail message to "the lack of clarity between F.D.A. approval versus F.D.A. finish in the market is an important point."

Actually. F.D.A has not been approved. or cleared P.R.F.M. derived in a Selphyl Centrifuge marketed for Facial rejuvenation. 2002 Cleared the Agency a blood-insamlingssystem called Fibrinet, whose Platelet-rich by-products orthopedic physician then be used to accelerate tissue repair. in 2009, This same machine was born again as Selphyl, and since then, the company promoted it as a way to "reverse the natural aging process." This week, said Shelly Burgess, a spokesman to F.D.A. Selphyl's maker must file an amendment in order to obtain approval to market its system for the collection of blood in a new way, and any such change can be found on this letter.

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