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Anti-Cellulite
Creams Sound
Great, But Do They Really Work?
Excerpt
from
ABCNews.com
Open just about any women's magazine
and you'll find ads for anti-cellulite creams that promise to
reduce the spongy, dimply, cottage cheese-looking skin that causes
distress to so many women.
The products tout caffeine,
retinol and the antioxidant DMAE as the special ingredients that
help reduce the appearance of cellulite, which first surfaces
on the hips, thighs and buttocks of millions of women during adolescence.
Though excess weight and a lack of exercise can contribute to
the problem, even thin women grapple with it.
According to a study by Neutrogena, 70 percent of women have
cellulite. More women have it than men, because women have thinner
skin, so it shows more clearly.
Wrestling With Cellulite
Over the years, Vivian Carlson has done everything to stay in
shape: she runs, goes to the gym and eats healthily, but has had
no luck in getting rid of her cellulite. At one point, she even
took a dust buster to her inner thigh, hoping to suck the dimply
skin away.
"I heard about the treatments they give at the spas this
wasn't so different," Carlson said. "It's all suction and massage.
Why spend the money on the spa treatments? I thought I was on
to something."
But all she got for her efforts was some red skin. So Carlson
avoids wearing dresses or skirts and wears a skirted bathing suit
to the beach.
She's not alone, and that is why the interest in anti-cellulite
creams is so strong.
Linda Wells, editor-in-chief of Allure magazine, says
the new products claim to help with the appearance of cellulite,
and do not say that they can banish it completely
"No cream will get rid of cellulite," Wells said. "And they
don't really say that they do. What they say is 'help the appearance
of cellulite.'"
Caffeine is in almost every cellulite-reducing product that
shows any benefit, because it helps blood flow to the skin and
works like a diuretic, Wells said, adding that it flushes you
out.
"In removing moisture from the skin, it firms it, albeit temporarily,"
Wells said.
Retinol is supposed to work by being able to penetrate the skin,
exfoliate it, and increase collagen production, which makes skin
thicker and hides the dimpling fat. But the question is how much
is needed in the products to achieve the effects, because too
much can dry out the skin and cause it to redden and peel, Wells
said.
Other creams boast the ingredient dimethylaminoethanol or DMAE,
an antioxidant derived from fish that when combined with amino
acids supposedly stimulates the muscles to contract and become
firmer.
No Scientific Proof
But doctors insist there is no scientific proof that cellulite
creams are effective in getting rid of cellulite or reducing its
appearance.
Women who believe that they can eliminate cellulite through
creams, or even weight loss, are likely to be disappointed, said
Dr. Garry S. Brody, a professor of plastic surgery at the University
of Southern California.
"So-called cellulite is the natural anatomic contour characteristic
of many women's thighs and buttocks," Brody said. "It is unrelated
to weight gain or loss. There is absolutely no surgical or medical
solution to women's dislike of this appearance except for the
psychological self-deception of wanting to believe the ads."
Cellulite Is the Norm
Dr. Lisa M. Donofrio, an assistant professor of dermatology
at Yale University School of Medicine, and Tulane University School
of Medicine, agreed that there is no scientific proof that the
creams work, and there is no concrete way to measure cellulite,
either. She tells her patients that cellulite is normal, and is
likely the product of genetics and hormones.
"Cellulite is a storage pattern of superficial fat," Donofrio
said. "Instead of fat being stored diffusely it is stored in little
pockets separated by fibrous strands called septae."
Contrary to what patients have heard or read, cellulite is not
the result of toxins, poor circulation or clogged lymphatics,
she said. In fact, one study that compared cellulite fat to other
fat found no biochemical differences. If patients really want
to try something to get rid of cellulite beyond diet and
exercise they can try the creams, but she suggests buying
the inexpensive variety, and giving it eight weeks to work.
One doctor said that he has heard anecdotally from his patients
that the creams help eliminate the appearance of cellulite, but
there is no medical proof to back it up.
"I have never read a convincing research article that explains
how anti-cellulite creams work," said Dr. Ron M. Shelton of the
New York Aesthetic Center. "We do know that they do not create
long-lasting effects. The topical therapy must be continued to
maintain the results."
Theoretically, at least, cream ingredients such as methylxanthine
caffeine is one form of it are chemicals that reduce
fluid retention, which can make cellulite worse. But there is
a lack of medical data showing that the products can be absorbed
well into the fat through the skin surface, Shelton said.
Reaching the Fat Cells
Donofrio said there have been a few small trials by cosmetic
companies or physicians who are "testing" their own products,
but she questions how the cellulite is measured.
One 1999 published study showed no improvement in cellulite
for 56 women who had tried a tissue-kneading machine or aminophylline
cream, one of the ingredients in current anti-cellulite creams.
"The main problem is twofold: Do these ingredients have any
merit when applied topically, and at what concentration?" Donofrio
said. It is "pretty ludicrous" to think that a topical agent could
get through multiple layers of skin and into the fat, but even
if that were possible, no one has studied at what concentration
it would be possible, she said.
There is also no standardized means of measuring cellulite,
making it difficult to gauge whether improvement has indeed taken
place, she said. Both caffeine and aminophylline, ingredients
found in the creams, are dehydrating chemicals.
It is postulated that they perhaps show benefit by changing
the water content of the skin overlying the fat, and change the
look of that skin. But only Retin-A, which is available by prescription
and is known generically as tretinoin, has been proven to do that.
"Retin-A thickens the uppermost skin cell layer this
has been scientifically proven," Donofrio said. "If the skin over
the cellulite is thicker, the cellulite won't 'bulge' out so much.
Let's say you have a down comforter that is lumpy. It will look
a lot lumpier with a thin cotton cover that it will with a thick
canvas cover to camouflage it."
The over-the-counter alternative to Retin-A is a metabolite
of tretinoin called retinol, but the concentration as which it
can thicken the skin to improve cellulite if it can at
all is unknown, she said.
Perhaps the solution is simply accepting cellulite, Donofrio
says.
"I like to think that in some parallel universe, somewhere,
the lumpy distribution pattern of fat was picked by society to
be the beautiful one, and all those with the smooth pattern were
labeled as boring," she said.
Reference
Source 104
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