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... and I overheard her say to the lovely, 30-something
femme fatale, “You’re so young and beautiful! Why do you need BOTOX®?” I’m
certain she thought that to be a rhetorical question… but she was wrong. The
correct answer, however, becomes self-evident if you’re armed with a basic
understanding of skin structure and a little information about how BOTOX®
actually works its magic.
First a bit of important anatomy: The muscles of facial expression lie directly
over the facial bones. Next there’s a layer of fat which varies in thickness
and in some places, for example around the eyes and in the forehead, can be
insignificantly thin. Above this fatty layer lies the deepest layer of skin,
the Dermis.
The Dermis is a dense web of woven collagen fibers not
unlike a thick, flexible cloth. Collagen fibers provide strength and elasticity
to the skin, so we constantly produce new collagen to replace old collagen,
reinforcing and repairing the Dermis.
As we age, the rate of collagen production slows
dramatically, and the formerly thick, flexible collagen becomes thinner and
more brittle.
The outermost layer is the Epidermis. It’s composed of four distinct layers.
Soft new cells are created at the deepest layer, the Basal Layer, and rise
through the more superficial layers, changing and hardening as they rise.
 By
the time they reach the surface, the epidermal cells become dead, dry, crusty
flakes which slough off in order to make way for the next rising layer.
The cycle is endless but, as we age, cell replacement slows
to a crawl. Babies create a new layer of epidermis every 7-10 days. At age 40,
we require about 45 days to complete the process.
Now, let’s talk about wrinkles.
There are two types of wrinkles, active wrinkles and passive wrinkles.
Active wrinkles occur only when you are actually moving muscles to make a
facial expression. Passive wrinkles, or furrows, are visible even at rest...
even while asleep!
The “woven cloth” of the Dermis becomes more brittle as we
age… as if cashmere were becoming burlap… and our facial muscles are actively
wrinkling that fragile cloth over and over, thousands of times a day.
Regrettably, the most susceptible areas are also the most active and, to make
matters worse, have the least amount of cushioning fatty tissue.
Despite skin’s natural elasticity, the formation of
permanent, passive furrows are the inevitable result of a million active
‘scrunchings’ of the forehead, between the eyebrows and at the Crow’s Feet.
Furthermore, as I mentioned before, adult skin cells shed more slowly leaving a
dryer, duller, more brittle surface layer which only serves to accentuate the
deepening furrows… visual Black Hole.
Dry, deep furrows covered in dull dead skin cells! What’s a
girl to do?!BOTOX®, properly applied, weakens the facial muscles. That’s right, weakens,
not paralyses. The worst enemy of “good” is “better”, less is more, etc.,
etc., etc.
Over-application of BOTOX®, paralyzing your face into an
expressionless mask, is singularly unattractive. Really. However, weakening the
muscles while preserving the attractive and (in my opinion) essential quality
of facial expression, is a terrific way to extend your youthfully smooth
appearance and possibly completely avoid ever forming passive wrinkles and deep
furrows.
Of course, the process of permanent furrowing accelerates
due to thinning and decreased resiliency of the skin as we age… but starting
BOTOX® in our 30s, preemptively striking at active wrinkles, is a lot more
effective than trying to play “catch up” with our passive wrinkles when we’re
approaching 50.
So, the question should have been, “Why not start BOTOX® in your 30s, before
permanent, deep wrinkles form?”
And that, indeed, is rhetorical! |