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Sunday 12 June 2011

Having Botox Early - Should or Should Not?



In 1992, the average age of patients using Botox and Alastair Carruthers Jean doctors who published their first article on the anti-wrinkle Botox was 41 years. Today, users of Botox tend to be younger, even girls began using Botox. But if the fact of Botox too early could give you the effects you want or not? 

Last month, an eight year old girl from California, was taken to hospital for care because her mother, Kerry Campbell, injected her with Botox. She said on television that her daughter has insisted on having treatment to remove wrinkles when she smiles. 


The mothers made their daughters injected with Botox is not uncommon. Another mother in Britain, Sarah Burge, shocked the media when she said she gave her 15 years daughter of Botox injections, coining the term "teen-draining" in the process. Whatever the widespread condemnation, mothers thought their daughters that they do a favor to prevent wrinkles in adulthood.


Cosmetic specialists warn the trend among teenage Botox. Botox has been used to treat men and women to serve moderate expression lines. Now, men and increasingly women in their twenties have Botox as a preventative for wrinkles in the future. In addition, a number of stars seem a good example for young girls follow this trend. It is like the latest must-have handbag: girls want - and the sooner the better. 


The star of the series 18 years Glee, Charice Pempengco said she wanted the procedure "new look at the camera" The 25-year British actress Carey Mulligan. (An education Pride & Prejudice) Lindsay Lohan and Hillary Duff, Kim Kardashian are among the "baby Botox" supposedly under pressure to maintain its profile youth.


Make-up artist Sadie Jean Sloss, who worked on the model of Britain's Next Top Make Me a Supermodel and UK, the defenders of the legal age of Botox. He says there is no reason why people should not use Botox in the mid-twenties. John Schloss, who is 28 and runs a popular beauty salon, Dolly Leo, in Edinburgh, says many women do Botox in their twenties because of pressure to look young. He said: "At 25 or 26, it slows the aging process, because the muscles are not contracting people have heard of these things and they want to try .." 


However, calling sub-Aging Botox does not realize is that children and adolescents do not have wrinkles: they have facial expressions, and the two are not the same. Barter normal facial expression at such a young age and stage of social development, hoping it can push the wrinkles of adult life and the hyper-expression may eventually lead to wrinkles is certainly a sacrifice too far.


The highlight here is that there is no evidence that the long-term Botox works as a preventive measure, any license to use it as such. The mechanism of the drug is to relax the muscles responsible for expression lines and is only authorized for the treatment of moderate to severe frown lines. 


Even having a Botox treatment too early may ultimately do more harm to your eyes as well. View photos of Hollywood legend Elizabeth Taylor at each eight marriage (almost always five-year intervals) to recognize changes in her looks. Although she was clearly still a beautiful woman from his adolescence, but no doubt her looks have not reached their peak until she was in her mid-thirties. If Botox was available to Taylor in his early twenties, would she ever that the same level of maturity of beauty for which she will now always be remembered? This is probably not. 


Botox can be a powerful and effective treatment for those in the Middle Ages, because it slows down the facial structure. For some, can restore self-esteem lost by the aging process. However, excessive use of long-term medication can cause muscle atrophy, which may be particularly sensitive around the eyes, where the face may appear inadvertently years - despite the absence of wrinkles. Especially after Botox too early can result in adverse outcomes over time, and you can lose you the best looks ever intended to have.

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