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tsbrenda
04-18-2009, 01:33 AM
A cheap and possibly deadly route to beauty

Illegal use of silicone as alternative to cosmetic surgery may be on the rise


By Anemona Hartocollis and Christina Davidson

updated 12:00 p.m. PT, Fri., April 17, 2009
NEW YORK - Like almost every woman, Fiordaliza Pichardo just wanted to look beautiful, so a few years ago, she began getting silicone injections from a woman she met through a friend in order to plump up her thighs and derriere.

She never expected to pay such a high price for her looks.
In March, a day after receiving an injection, Ms. Pichardo, 43, died of what the medical examiner later determined was a silicone embolism in her lungs.

The city’s health department fears that the illegal use of silicone as an alternative to cosmetic surgery is on the rise. The city’s poison control center has received three calls in the last 10 months from doctors who have treated patients injected with silicone; Ms. Pichardo’s case was not among them. In the previous two years, there were only two such cases.

Health department officials say there may be other cases that have gone unreported, since doctors are not legally obligated to report silicone poisoning or even death, and since silicone is hard to detect through X-rays or CT scans. The department was planning Thursday to send an advisory by e-mail and fax to thousands of doctors advising them to watch for silicone poisoning cases.

Nationally, reports of buttock enhancement using silicone and similar thick liquids have surfaced from the Northeast to Miami, and the Food and Drug Administration is also planning to issue a warning on the dangers of such practices, Siobhan DeLancey, a spokeswoman, said Thursday.

“This seems to be kind of an underground occurrence, so it’s difficult to get numbers of actual events and to know exactly what these people are being injected with,” Ms. DeLancey said. “It’s important to note that none of the products that are reportedly being used are approved for this purpose.”

Ms. DeLancey said silicone was not approved for injection into tissues at all, only for use in the eyes and in certain implants where it is contained and cannot leak into tissue. She said the F.D.A. had the ability to conduct criminal investigations, and would encourage victims to come forward “so that we can document the problem.”

Across the Internet, chat rooms, Web sites and blogs have sprung up discussing buttock injections.

The victims have become caught up in an underground beauty industry that uses injections of black-market, medical-grade silicone or industrial-grade silicone as a cheap, fast and easily accessible way to plump up breasts, buttocks, thighs and even wrinkles.

The injections are popular among Latina women and transgender women, who may be unable to afford conventional plastic surgery and who tap into it through unlicensed practitioners working through word of mouth, city officials said.

Although side effects are fairly rare, silicone can migrate through the bloodstream, creating potentially fatal clots in the lungs, as it did in Ms. Pichardo’s case, said Dr. Nathan M. Graber, director of environmental and occupational disease epidemiology for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. It can also migrate through tissues, leading to ugly lumps and chronic pain.

The injections are administered at home, in motel rooms, in makeshift offices or at “pumping parties,” where the guests take turns injecting one another, officials said.

Young transgender women often seek out silicone injections because they are a quick way of making bodies more feminine, unlike hormone treatments, which may take years to work, said Dr. Nick Gorton, an emergency room doctor who treats transgender patients at the Lyon-Martin Health Services clinic in San Francisco.

“If you go to a pumping party, you can have it tonight,” Dr. Gorton said. “It’s a big temptation, especially among young people who, when you’re 20, you’re not thinking about your own mortality.”

People are often reluctant to report side effects, because they feel that they are turning in a member of their community, health officials said.

Industrial-grade silicone can be bought at a hardware store. But Dr. Graber said there have been reports of the use of substitutes like castor oil, mineral oil, petroleum jelly and even automobile transmission fluid.

Difficult diagnosis
Dr. Suhail Raoof, chief of pulmonary medicine at New York Methodist Hospital, treated a woman with silicone poisoning in 2007. She came in complaining of shortness of breath, chest pain and coughing, reminiscent of pneumonia, he said, and told doctors that she had been injected with about 500 milliliters of silicone in each buttock about half an hour earlier.

Because silicone is not visible on an X-ray or a CT scan, Dr. Raoof said, diagnosis is difficult without a biopsy. Doctors used deduction to diagnose the cause of the woman’s symptoms, and she survived, he said.

Ms. Pichardo was not so lucky.

Ms. Pichardo’s 19-year-old daughter, Marinés Rodriguez, said that her mother began getting silicone injections several years ago after a friend introduced her to a cosmetologist.

Ms. Rodriguez said the cosmetologist went to Ms. Pichardo’s home in the Bronx and to other clients in Manhattan and Miami. A cup of silicone cost $800, and the cosmetologist would inject half a cup to two cups in a single session, Ms. Rodriguez said. Her mother, she said, “didn’t really care about the price. It was more that she knew somebody who had this first.”

Ms. Pichardo came to trust the woman. “She felt that was her friend, nothing could go wrong,” Ms. Rodriguez said.

Ms. Pichardo was last injected on March 17, and died the next day. Doctors thought she had pneumonia, Ms. Rodriguez said, and the family never thought to mention the silicone injections — which were discovered during the autopsy — because they thought they were harmless.

The medical examiner has ruled her death a homicide because she was injected by an unlicensed nonmedical practitioner, said Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner. No charges have been filed. Paul J. Browne, a police spokesman, said, “We believe she has fled to the Dominican Republic and we are in discussions with the district attorney as to next steps.”

Ms. Rodriguez said the family was distraught, but found it hard to be angry. The day after her mother died, she said, the cosmetologist visited to pay her condolences. “We didn’t think she did it on purpose,” she said.

This article, "A Cheap, Fast and Possibly Deadly Route to Beauty," first appeared in The New York Times.

Copyright © 2009 The New York Times

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30267013

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/17/nyregion/17silicone.html?_r=1&hp


http://www.hungangels.com/board/viewtopic.php?t=42080&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0

http://www.hungangels.com/board/viewtopic.php?t=28186&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=10

Alyssa87
04-18-2009, 01:42 AM
RIP

BrendaQG
04-18-2009, 01:47 AM
RIP
:(
There is risk in any surgical procedure no matter how minor.

2009AD
04-18-2009, 01:50 AM
There is risk in any surgical procedure no matter how minor.

What part of illegal silicone did you not understand?

tsbrenda
04-18-2009, 02:00 AM
MICRO FAT INJECTIONS with current medicine, once fat is processed it stays
this is current medicine
its discussed in his FAQ's
http://www.betterbuttocks.com/betterbuttocks_microfatphotos.htm

Brazilian Butt
Dr Matlock USING FAT
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaPfaQbIlSQ&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lioCrFD4hwM

you can have fat put in your cheeks, butt and hips est. http://www.betterbuttocks.com/photos_africanamerican.htm

for example look at the fat grafting here for breast
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8MiKagmLBg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2_cK-ddpnw

http://www.makemeheal.com/news/buttock-augmentation-implants/117


JUST FOR FUN
http://forladiesbyladies.com/index.php/2009/03/16/ten-odes-to-big-butts-and-better-health/

SarahG
04-18-2009, 08:00 PM
There is risk in any surgical procedure no matter how minor.

What part of illegal silicone did you not understand?

Is silicone injection approved by the FDA yet? I was under the impression that it hasn't been.

The important issue is who is administering it, and what they're administering. Not whether or not its legal.

Pumping parties, where people with no medical experience inject industrial silicone into each other sharing needles in someone's basement is very very unsafe.

The problems of that include (not a comprehensive list):
-Contamination risks from not administering it in a sterile environment (i.e. a doctor's office or hospital)
-Industrial silicone is not the same as pharmaceutical silicone, among the differences is the issue of sterilization. Industrial silicone meant for industrial applications can be extremely dirty because ITS MEANT TO GO INTO MACHINES and things.
-People w/out medical experience not knowing what they're doing.


Any chemical intended for pharmaceutical applications is manufactured far differently from industrial counterparts. Everything from the way manufacture of said chemicals, to their handling, to what containers they're stored in will be different depending on what it's intended for.

There's even a difference between industrial and pharmaceutical formaldehyde . The stuff used by podiatrists is not the same as the stuff used by morticians for embalming, nor is either of those two the same as what's used in factories to make plastic.

The reason why DA's get so angry with people who do silicone injections illegally isn't so much because its illegal, but because the whole system is setup to be harsh on anyone who uses non-pharmaceutical grade chemicals or components. Doctors can face jail time simply for using non-pharmaceutical grade botox for instance.

I know, personally, a plastic surgeon whose facing a prison sentence right now just because his supplier accidentally sent him botox for lab experiments instead of botox for medical use. The bottle specifically said, in his case "for lab experiments only, not for medical use" but he accidentally used it thinking it was medical botox. When he found out the error, he notified every patient at once- none had any problems, but the DA still wants him in jail for the mistake!

mimiplastique
04-18-2009, 08:09 PM
you people have way too much bullshiting time on your hands . wtf go jag off

Danielle Foxx
04-18-2009, 08:33 PM
I have had my lips and chin for over 10 years, no issues.

My hips have been in for about 6 years, I have very little issues with it. It has settled a bit, has been for a while, which created a sorta bump on my hip where the sil ends and my thighs start, which can be corrected by a small touch up. Kinda like sattle bags lol. No heart attacks or lung problems but I consider myself one of the lucky ones for sure.

I went to this aesthetic office here in LA who does sil injections and they told me I would need $2000 worth to fix it... I am like??? WTF? You are going to put another ass cheek in there? It will probably only take 30 - 50 ccs to fix it.

peggygee
04-18-2009, 10:04 PM
I've written about my experiences with Silicon, which I have had in my
body for about 36 yeares, with no negative effects.

While medical grade Silicon administered by a qualified and comptetent
professional in moderate quantities can yield safe and aesthetically
pleasing results, industrial grade or extremely high amounts in one
session should be avoided at all costs.

There are a number of viable alternatives that a woman may utilize
to enhance her hips calves and other parts of the body, such as fat
harvesting, Hydrogel, and PMMA to name a few.

TsVanessa69
04-18-2009, 10:29 PM
RIP
:(
There is risk in any surgical procedure no matter how minor.
Yes even legal work can kill you. Its a risk we take. I have had exessive amounts of silicone throughout my body and after 10 years, all is good. Not every story is a horror story.

TsVanessa69
04-18-2009, 10:31 PM
I have had my lips and chin for over 10 years, no issues.

My hips have been in for about 6 years, I have very little issues with it. It has settled a bit, has been for a while, which created a sorta bump on my hip where the sil ends and my thighs start, which can be corrected by a small touch up. Kinda like sattle bags lol. No heart attacks or lung problems but I consider myself one of the lucky ones for sure.

I went to this aesthetic office here in LA who does sil injections and they told me I would need $2000 worth to fix it... I am like??? WTF? You are going to put another ass cheek in there? It will probably only take 30 - 50 ccs to fix it.
Yea momma all you need it a little blending, its part of the process.

Danielle Foxx
04-19-2009, 01:35 AM
I have had my lips and chin for over 10 years, no issues.

My hips have been in for about 6 years, I have very little issues with it. It has settled a bit, has been for a while, which created a sorta bump on my hip where the sil ends and my thighs start, which can be corrected by a small touch up. Kinda like sattle bags lol. No heart attacks or lung problems but I consider myself one of the lucky ones for sure.

I went to this aesthetic office here in LA who does sil injections and they told me I would need $2000 worth to fix it... I am like??? WTF? You are going to put another ass cheek in there? It will probably only take 30 - 50 ccs to fix it.
Yea momma all you need it a little blending, its part of the process.

Been trying to find someone who won't give me cherries, and also one who will touch up someone else's work. Hard to find.

I was gonna go to Mexico with Dr. M but I don't wanna go alone... I am scared of dick cheese.

NYTSJulie
04-19-2009, 03:01 AM
Silicone can be ok if you go to someone good and dont overdo it. I have my ass done and some in my hips. I am thinking of more hips but am on the fence about it.

tsbrenda
04-20-2009, 03:15 PM
AUTOIMMUNE ISSUES, migration,deformation,siliconomas,DEATH


http://www.drfpalmer.com/blog/silicone-injections/





Silicone can be ok if you go to someone good and dont overdo it. I have my ass done and some in my hips. I am thinking of more hips but am on the fence about it.

Danielle Foxx
04-20-2009, 05:34 PM
AUTOIMMUNE ISSUES, migration,deformation,siliconomas,DEATH

You forgot Delusions, craziness, loss of mind and terrible people skills.

Marilyn
04-20-2009, 11:52 PM
I actually want the silicon on my hips removed! I just had the one on my lips removed by Dr. Paul Rosenberg in Fort Lee Nj and replaced by my own fat....which I prefer...!!! But if the silicon removal of my lips cost over $8000, I'm scared to even ask him about the price of removing it from hips!!!
my waist line is 26 in and my hips 42 in, so I would now like a 36 in hips :)

Danielle Foxx
04-21-2009, 12:40 AM
I actually want the silicon on my hips removed! I just had the one on my lips removed by Dr. Paul Rosenberg in Fort Lee Nj and replaced by my own fat....which I prefer...!!! But if the silicon removal of my lips cost over $8000, I'm scared to even ask him about the price of removing it from hips!!!
my waist line is 26 in and my hips 42 in, so I would now like a 36 in hips :)

And why? Are you having side effects or just not happy with how it looks? Tired of it? Remodeling?

Marilyn
04-21-2009, 01:18 AM
I actually want the silicon on my hips removed! I just had the one on my lips removed by Dr. Paul Rosenberg in Fort Lee Nj and replaced by my own fat....which I prefer...!!! But if the silicon removal of my lips cost over $8000, I'm scared to even ask him about the price of removing it from hips!!!
my waist line is 26 in and my hips 42 in, so I would now like a 36 in hips :)

And why? Are you having side effects or just not happy with how it looks? Tired of it? Remodeling?

I guess remodeling!!! :)
At one time I loved it! But now while my working environment changed and attending college (finally) I feel the big ass gets more attention than my skills!! LOL
Besides I'm not a young thing anymore, so I want guys to see more than just that!
Oh and I've never had side effects, other than a bit darkening of a spot (like an oval) under my left butt...it kinda looks like what you showed on your pic but mine is darker than the rest of the skin. Other than that, thank God, no issues!

Helvis2012
04-30-2009, 12:05 AM
Be careful!!!!!


You get what you pay for!!!!! Don't play it cheap!!

MacShreach
04-30-2009, 01:13 AM
AUTOIMMUNE ISSUES, migration,deformation,siliconomas,DEATH

You forgot Delusions, craziness, loss of mind and terrible people skills.

ROFLMAO Pure genius.

No diss to Brenda, and silicone worries me too, but that riposte was brilliant.

You're on form tonight mama.

tsbrenda
05-01-2009, 04:14 AM
thin coat of runny silicone gelhttp://www.cyberpunkreview.com/news/wired-sheathfailure_f.jpg



http://everythingaboutplasticsurgery.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/gross.jpg


http://everythingaboutplasticsurgery.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/images.jpg

http://llwyd.tripod.com/gross/lsmary1.jpg
http://www.kapelovitz.com/images/plastic4.jpg
http://llwyd.tripod.com/gross/lsmary1.jpg

Soft Tissue Tumors Part 1

Introduction, Fibrous, Fibrohistiocytic & Adipose tumors
http://www.pathologyoutlines.com/softtissue_files/image002.jpg

http://www.pathologyoutlines.com/softtissue.html
http://www.pathologyoutlines.com/softtissue.html
http://www.pathologyoutlines.com/softtissue.html
http://www.pathologyoutlines.com/softtissue.html

Body builders inject "Popeye" oil for giant biceps
http://www.craphound.com/images/popeyeoil.jpg


http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_kC5MT2r5U8s/SI12FMgVGGI/AAAAAAAAEgA/GYNVilupS1Q/s320/ts-vega+olivia+perry.jpg

http://www.freakestphysique.blogger.com.br/synthol60al.jpg


Silicone granuloma of the face treated with minocycline
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology - Volume 52, Issue 2 Suppl 1 (February 2005) - Copyright © 2005 American Academy of Dermatology, Inc. - About This Journal







Silicone granuloma of the face treated with minocycline


Meral J. Arin, MD ∗
Jens Bäte, MD
Thomas Krieg, MD
Nicolas Hunzelmann, MD

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From the Department of Dermatology, University of Cologne
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Reprint requests: Meral J. Arin, MD, Department of Dermatology, University of Cologne, 50924 Cologne, Germany.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
E-mail address: meral.arin@medizin.uni-koeln.de

Cologne, Germany

This supplement is made possible through the generous support of Stiefel Laboratories for the American Academy of Dermatology. Funding sources: None. Conflicts of interest: None identified.
PII S0190-9622(04)01923-1

Siliconoma represents a granulomatous foreign body reaction to silicone, which is often used for soft tissue augmentation. Although considered as biologically inert for a long time, silicone has been implicated in various undesirable local and systemic reactions, sometimes with a latency period of up to several decades. Treatment of siliconomas is difficu…


http://media.ebaumsworld.com/mediaFiles/picture/433751/80465721.jpg


http://a.abcnews.com/health/diet/widgets/mainNews/preview?id=6858351

Toxic Butt-Boosting Shots Send Women to Hospital

http://a.abcnews.com/Health/WellnessNews/story?id=6858351&page=1

http://myherooftheday.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/butt-injection-silicone-300x300.jpg

Dermatology Online Journal

Foreign body granuloma formation secondary to silicone injection
Elissa M Schwartzfarb1, Juan Martin Hametti MD2, Paolo Romanelli MD1, Carlos Ricotti MD1
Dermatology Online Journal 14 (7): 20

1. University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery
2. Universidad del Salvador Facultad de Medicina Argentina. c@ricotti.net

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Abstract
Injectable silicone has been used extensively over the last 40 years for soft tissue augmentation. Although considered biologically inert, this material has been implicated in a variety of adverse reactions including granulomas, disfiguring nodules, and lymphedema, sometimes with latent periods of decades. Often these complications are a result of the use of industrial grade products injected by unlicensed or unskilled practitioners. Here we report a case of foreign body granuloma in the thigh secondary to silicone injection in the buttocks. Initially the patient did not disclose a cosmetic contouring procedure administered by a nonprofessional nine months earlier, making diagnosis difficult. We remind clinicians to include foreign body granulomas in the differential diagnosis of apparent cellulitis and to question patients about the use of injectable fillers.



Introduction
The use of injectable silicone for cosmetic purposes is becoming increasingly popular. The rise in nonprofessional use of questionably pure silicone may increase the incidence of granulomatous inflammatory complications. We present one case of foreign body granuloma formation following injection of silicone into the buttocks by a nonprofessional [1].



Clinical Synopsis
A 40-year-old otherwise healthy Hispanic woman was referred to our dermatology clinic for evaluation of a 4-month history of "recurrent cellulitis" of the right lower extremity. During this interval she was hospitalized twice for administration of intravenous antibiotics, which she claims to have temporarily improved the skin changes and associated pain. She attributed the lesion to trauma to her right leg weeks before these recurrent episodes had begun. After detailed questioning and specifically asking her if she had any cosmetic procedures or injections to the area, she reported having a series of liquid silicone injections in the buttocks performed by a nonprofessional for cosmetic contouring approximately 9 months prior to presentation. In this patient, medical grade silicone was purportedly used, but its administration by a nonprofessional raises a question of credibility.



Figure 1 Figure 2
Figures 1 & 2. Right thigh: multiple erythematous, indurated and tender plaques

On physical exam, multiple large erythematous, tender and indurated plaques were appreciated over the right thigh and buttocks (Figs. 1 & 2). There was no lymphadenopathy. Tissue cultures performed were negative for atypical mycobacteria, bacteria and fungus. Lower extremity duplex dopplers were negative for deep venous thrombosis and radiograph of the right lower extremity was normal. Pathology was consistent with a foreign body granuloma formation secondary to silicone. Dilated vacuoles of variable size were present throughout the subcutaneous tissues, surrounded by a granulomatous lymphohistiocytic infiltrate (Figs. 3 & 4). The patient was initially treated with prednisone 30 mg daily and minocycline with improvement of induration and pain. Once prednisone was tapered to 2.5 mg per day the patient returned to clinic with increasing pain and induration in the right thigh.



Figure 3 Figure 4
Figure 3. Routine histological evaluation (10x magnification) shows round to oval vacuoles of varying size surrounded by histiocytes and few multinucleate giant cells (inset) in the deep dermis.
Figure 4. Routine histological evaluation at 40x magnification showed histiocytes with some with foamy cytoplasm


Discussion
The incidence of granuloma formation in patients injected with medical grade silicone is relatively low, although some reports have suggested they may occur in up to 20 percent of patients receiving injections. Granulomatous reactions may occur from 3 weeks to 20 years after injection and can be severely debilitating, adversely affecting quality of life [2].

Granuloma formation has been attributed to a natural host response to wall off exogenous substances too large to be ingested by macrophages [3]. Trauma and infection have been reported prior to silicone granuloma formation and they have been thought to be triggers for the formation of foreign body granulomas [2]. Migration of injected material has also been reported and was noted in our patient as the migration from buttocks to inner and posterior thigh.

With an increase in cosmetic procedures being performed by nonprofessionals, foreign body reactions may become more commonly encountered in clinical settings. In South Florida, we frequently see such reactions. The patient's hesitancy to reveal the unlicensed silicone injections led to a delay in diagnosis, hospital admission, extensive testing, and intravenous antibiotic therapy. Because a latent period is common, it is possible that patients may not initially remember previous procedures. It is important for the physician to consider foreign body reactions in the face of cellulitis non-responsive to appropriate antibiotic therapy.

References
1. Chasan PE. The history of injectable silicone fluids for soft-tissue augmentation. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2007 Dec;120(7):2034-40; discussion 2041-3. PubMed

2. Rapaport MJ, Vinnik C, Zarem H. Injectable silicone: cause of facial nodules, cellulitis, ulceration, and migration. Aesthetic Plast Surg. 1996;20:267-76. PubMed

3. Bigatà X, Ribera M, Bielsa I, Ferrándiz C. Adverse granulomatous reaction after cosmetic dermal silicone injection. Dermatol Surg. 2001;27:198-200. PubMed


Dermatology Online Journal



http://dermatology.cdlib.org/147/letter/silicone/ricotti.html

http://dermatology.cdlib.org/147/letter/silicone/4s.jpg


http://dermatology.cdlib.org/147/letter/silicone/3s.jpg

Helvis2012
05-01-2009, 04:53 AM
No, no....this is not good. Please refer to your program for further information.


Tape can rip and pull.

tsbrenda
05-02-2009, 03:21 AM
ITS SAID BUT I WILL HAVE THE LAST LAUGH OR CRY!



IT JUST TAKES TIME TIME IS NOT ON YOUR SIDE AFTER SILICONE INJECTIONS

http://www.kapelovitz.com/images/plastic4.jpg



AUTOIMMUNE ISSUES, migration,deformation,siliconomas,DEATH

You forgot Delusions, craziness, loss of mind and terrible people skills.