Cellulite Natural Treatment |
Cellulite
- All women know what this is, right? Yet there is great disagreement and some
controversy in the medical community as to what it is and whether or not it is
actually a real thing, a real diagnosis! The WebMD website says that "its
name makes it sound like a medical condition"! Well, this
"non-medical" condition seriously affects and deeply troubles some
80- 90% of adult women! Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent each year
trying to treat it. If all that doesn't qualify cellulite as a true condition
worthy of respect and attention by our physicians then something's very wrong!
Even so, there are many scary sounding "medical condition" names
which have been applied to what we commonly call cellulite including adiposis
edematosa, dermopanniculosis deformans, status protrusus cutis, and gynoid
lipodystrophy. Common nicknames for cellulite include orange peel syndrome,
cottage cheese skin, quilted mattress skin, and seat cushion skin.
Multiple
"causes" have been implicated (including genetic) but we still don't
really know for sure. Cellulite is rarely seen in men - is it a hormonally
linked condition? Why does cellulite predominantly affect the abdomen, buttocks
and thighs - why these areas? No one knows but it does suggest a hormonal
mediated mechanism; reminiscent of stretch marks (striae atrophica) and their
common areas of distribution - remarkably similar! Cellulite also seems to
appear during hormonally active periods in women's lives - adolescence,
pregnancy, and menopause.
Most
of us, doctors and patients alike, would recognize cellulite to be a dimpled,
puckered, irregular appearing skin surface affecting large areas. Dimples may
be cute on the face, but not on your thighs! The thighs, especially the outer
thighs, seem to be the most commonly affected areas. At the microscopic level
we know that something is happening to the architecture of the skin causing it
to appear uneven, puckered and so unappealingly unsmooth. There seems to be a
pseudoherniation (a bulging out without a true bulging through) of the
superficial subcutaneous fat poking nearly through the tight fibrous connective
tissue bands (which are supposed to act as retaining walls for the fat)
underneath the skin. We see the sum total of all these bulges as an overall
lumpy, bumpy look to the surface of the skin. It is very reminiscent of the way
pillow material bulges in between the buttons of a seat cushion!
Cellulite Natural Treatment |
Doctors
studying this dimpling phenomenon also recognized that depending on its
severity, body position could also affect the appearance of cellulite. In 1978,
the Nurnburger-Muller Scale was published:
The
Nurnburger-Muller Scale(1978) for Cellulite Classification:
0 -
no visible dimpling
1 -
dimpling visible on pinch/squeeze only
2 -
dimpling visible on standing only (not when lying down)
3 -
dimpling always present/visible (whether standing or lying down)
There
are a multitude of "options " available for treating cellulite today.
A recent Google search on "treatments for cellulite" revealed 1.4
million hits! But do any of them really work? Dr. Molly Wanner (noted Harvard
dermatologist) said "there is no treatment for cellulite". Noted
dermatologist Michael McGuire of UCLA concurred (NY Times article, 2009).
Weight
loss and strength training should help, but are not always the
answer! Cellulite is not always associated with being overweight or out of
shape. Skinny or overweight - you can still have cellulite. Many slender women
in great shape are plagued with cellulite.
Nutritional
changes and dietary supplements reportedly of assistance in the
fight against cellulite include the use of gingko biloba, sweet clover, grape
seed bioflavonoids, bladderwrack extract, oil of evening primrose, fish oil,
omega 3's & 6's, soy lecithin, green tea, milk thistle, and niacin. Goals
of these: boost metabolism, increase circulation, increase cellular nutrition,
and increase fat metabolism/breakdown. So called anti-cellulite diets are
designed to decrease inflammation, increase circulation, and increase fat
metabolism. It is very tough to prove or disprove any of these claims or to
determine if any of these intended effects are actually happening.
Anti-cellulite
creams typically contain forms of methylxanthines
(theophylline, aminophylline, caffeine) known to decrease blood vessel flow,
decrease tissue fluids and to increase fat metabolism - but do they even get
through the skin? Do the concentrations reach a level where they can be
effective? Are they around long enough to effect any real changes? The evidence
is very inconclusive for these creams and their effectiveness. Decreasing
tissue fluids does have the effect of temporarily reducing the appearance of
cellulite. As you will see throughout this article, any technique temporarily
decreasing tissue fluids will temporarily "work"!
Retin-A/retinols
show some benefit via the overall improvements in skin quality that come with
the better skin tone and smoothness they can effectuate. There is some evidence
that incorporating Retin-A with some of the methylxanthine-containing creams
might create a synergistic effect better than either one alone for reducing the
appearance of cellulite.
Tanning
does help minimize the appearance of cellulite. But tanning rays from the sun
or from a salon booth work via a UV radiation damage to the skin! This carries
more real disadvantages (skin aging, skin looks even worse long term, skin
cancer risks) than any potential benefits. Artificial or spray-type tanning
techniques are a much safer alternative!
Herbal,
seaweed and other types of body "wraps"
work by decreasing tissue fluids (i.e., they do work, but it is only
temporary).
Deep
tissue massage will theoretically increase local blood
flow, eliminate toxins, and decrease the tissue fluids. The only one of these
three which have proven (albeit temporary) effectiveness is the "decrease
the fluid" claim! Massage as a part of any treatment method will result in
at least temporary improvement in cellulite because it causes a temporary
decrease in tissue fluids and a temporary "redistribution/shifting"
of the subcutaneous fat as well.
The Endermology
device uses a special roller vacuum/massage technique. This does help - but
like many treatments - it is temporary. Short term, temporary treatments like
Endermology seem effective because they decrease tissue fluids in the area,
and/or effect a temporary fat "redistribution". As you will continue
to see, this strategy is the basis for many cellulite treatment options.
The Silhouette
device is essentially similar to the Endermology technology, utilizing the
massage principles of decreasing tissue fluids and shift/redistributing of fat
for temporarily reducing the appearance of cellulite.
Mesotherapy is
very controversial as to its efficacy or consistency for fat removal alone. A
lot of needles and injections are involved. The injected chemical cocktails are
intended to induce fat "melting" not really for the treatment of
cellulite. And even more irregularities in skin surface texture can result from
a mesotherapy treatment because the melting is not necessarily uniform or even -
i.e. more cellulite! Other reported problems include infection, rashes, and
allergic reactions.
Radiofrequency
(RF)
is an integral part of several of both the non-invasive and minimally invasive
machines and techniques available today. RF works by creating heat. This heat
can melt fat and "shrink wrap" loose skin to various degrees. It
makes sense that this should have benefits for cellulite - or does it? The
results are inconclusive thus far and RF has therefore not yet been approved or
cleared by the FDA as anti-cellulite treatment.
Vanquish
uses RF to heat and kill fat cells in way similar to HIFU( see below). The skin
can get very warm/hot (like an intense sun tanning exposure). A series of 6 - 8
treatment sessions, each lasting about 45 minutes is needed. Total cost is
about $3000 -$4000.
Pellevé
uses RF and massage for the (as expected) "temporary improvement" of
cellulite.
Infrared
light/red light as a type of non-invasive low level laser
therapy (LLLT) seems to actually work - but (as all the research has shown) it
must be the right wavelength of light to work.
Diode
laser based systems depend upon a series of treatments to be
most effective, as most treatments do. However, diode lasers can be a key
component of a non-invasive LLLT system and will have benefit if the proper
wavelength is utilized.
Smooth
Shapes uses a vacuum massage plus a 650nm light and a 915nm
laser. The massage effects are temporary. The low level laser therapy (LLLT)
has more of basis for long term effectiveness but there is no research
supported/peer reviewed published data on these light or laser wavelengths.
The TriActive
machine uses a form of LLLT plus vacuum massage.
Liposuction is
a great option for recontouring the body via the removal of troublesome
localized fat deposits, but it is a poor choice for treating cellulite itself.
Liposuction is very unlikely to make any areas of cellulite any better and can
actually make areas of overlying cellulite worse!
SmartLipo
laser lipolysis (fat melting) technology is a minimally invasive (not
non-invasive) procedure. Theory: laser melts the fat, tightens the skin,
causing overall smoothing. In practice - pretty good for getting rid of
stubborn fat, rarely helps the cellulite.
Cellulaze is
from the same company (Cynosure) that manufactures the SmartLipo machines.
Cellulaze is similarly promoted as a "minimally invasive" procedure -
but these are surgical procedures! A thin laser cable is inserted under the
skin through an incision to melt the subcutaneous fat and snip the fibrous
bands tethering the skin. It works - sort of - but not great. All the risks of
a surgical procedure- recovery/downtime issues, infection, scarring - must be
considered.
Subcision is
a very old method developed to try to "release" and correct bound
down, depressed, tethered scars via the actual surgical cutting of the fibrous
scar bands under the skin. This technique is sometimes recommended in one form
or another to treat cellulite. As a matter of fact, Cellulaze depends substantially
on this strategy. The effectiveness of the subcision technique for treating
cellulite has never been clearly established.
Collagenases are
actual connective tissue dissolving enzymes which are applied to or injected
under the skin, intended to loosen the tight, fibrous bands as a way to
potentially smooth out the bumpiness. There are many ongoing studies, but this
is still completely experimental.
HIFU
stands for High Intensity Focused Ultrasound. This is a non-invasive, non-surgical
way of targeting fat deposits for melting. The focused ultrasound generates
intense heat under the skin, killing and melting the fat cells as a possible
alternative to liposuction - but it really hurts! CoolSculpt uses fat freezing
technology instead of heat to kill fat cells. Neither technology has been shown
to have any positive effect on cellulite. For all we know, the effects of
ultrasound or freezing on cellulite could be similar to that often seen for
liposuction - not good!
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