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  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    1:42pm, EST

    Botox, Botox, everywhere: Best spots for the drug may be anywhere but your forehead

    By Meghan Holohan

    When most people think of Botox, they think of how it erases frown lines between the brows and makes crow’s feet disappear. But Botox is more than just a cosmetic fix.

    This month, researchers announced that Botox is a more effective treatment than steroids for plantar fasciitis, a condition where the connective tissues on the sole of the foot become inflamed. When doctors inject Botox into the calf muscles it thins them, causing them to pull less on the plantar fascia and reducing the pain.

    And last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved Botox to treat overactive bladder, a condition where the muscles of the bladder squeeze, leading to frequent urination and incontinence. Botox relaxes the bladder, reducing the urgency.

     “The mechanism of action is the same. [Botox treats] so many indications and various problems—cosmetic and overactive muscles,” says Dr. Anthony Youn, a plastic surgeon and assistant professor of surgery at William Beaumont School of Medicine. (Youn is also a frequent contributor to NBCNews.com and TODAY.com.) “[It helps] medical conditions where if you relax muscles that condition improves, like headaches or overactive bladders.”

    What else can Botox do? Let's find out.

    Migraines
    For some migraine sufferers, traditional treatments fail and they experience extreme pain. Plastic surgeons, like Dr. Anne Taylor, noticed that some of their patients who used Botox for wrinkles would schedule visits when they felt migraines starting.

    “I had been in practice for 15 years before it was released for migraines and I [had patients who said] ‘I have a migraine coming’ and had to come in and get Botox,” explains Taylor an associate professor at the Ohio State University Medical Center. 

    While physicians knew that Botox alleviated migraine pain, the FDA only approved its use for headaches in 2010. 

    The reason it works is because the nerve fibers take the Botox and the toxin cleaves a protein that is needed to release a neurotransmitter, says F. Michael Cutrer a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic. The neurotransmitter causes the spasms or muscle tightness that causes headaches, wrinkles, or twitches.

    “A reasonable percentage of these people were not responsive to [traditional treatment]. I would say 50 to 60 percent show [improvements with Botox]. Some of these people’s lives are completely changed,” Cutrer says.

    All Botox treatments, cosmetic or therapeutic, last anywhere from three to six months and most people need several treatments per year.

    Sweating
    A woman visited Taylor’s office—she needed to get electronic fingerprints for a job she applied to, but every time she attempted the fingerprinting it failed because her digits were slick with sweat. The patient wondered if there was anything Taylor could do. Taylor had been injecting Botox into armpits to treat hyperhidrosis, excessive sweating, so she thought Botox could help.

    “[Excessive sweat] is debilitating for the heavy sweaters,” says Taylor. “[Botox] works every time. It’s really fantastic.”

    After Taylor injected all the woman’s fingers with Botox, the woman’s hands were noticeably dry and she could successfully get fingerprinted.    

    “It works … because it deactivates the nerves that control the sweat glands,” Cutrer says. 

    Weight loss
    For more than 10 years, Dr. Anthony Kalloo — the Moses and Helen Golden Paulson Professor of Gastroenterology at Johns Hopkins Hospital — has used Botox to treat patients suffering from GI problems where the muscles clench up and spasm. The Botox relaxes the muscles, preventing the twitches. When he injected the Botox in the stomach he noticed something else—the food moves through slower, making a person feel fuller longer, meaning he eats less. He thought this would be a way to encourage weight loss.

    “The weight loss is moderate. Patients lose 20 to 30 pounds in four to six months,” he says. Because Botox is reversible he pairs his weight-loss treatment with a plan that includes exercise and healthy eating habits. (It turns out eating less does not shrink the stomach; it’s just a cruel urban legend.)

    Kalloo uses an endoscope, a long medical scope that is inserted orally, to inject the stomach from top to bottom with Botox. The procedure takes about 10 minutes and patients are in a twilight sleep, where they can’t feel pain, but aren’t completely unconscious. While he notes a recent research paper found that Botox did not work, previous studies have shown it’s effective (the FDA has yet to approve its use for weight loss). He believes that more work needs to be done, but thinks Botox shows promise.

    “We use a noninvasive method like endoscopy to enable a surgery-like result,” he says. “I think that this is the future of weight loss intervention.”  

    Square jaws and bulky calf muscles
    When some women look in the mirror, they cringe at the sight of their square jaws. While traditional plastic surgery can soften the jaw line, doctors in Asia, and increasingly in the United States, inject Botox in the face to thin the muscles.

    “If they feel like their jaws are too square or wide they can narrow the jaw line [with Botox],” says Youn. “The good and bad thing is the results of Botox last anywhere from three to six months.”

    Doctors also use it to shrink the calf muscles for those complaining of bulky legs. This might prevent patients from running as fast or jumping as high, but it doesn’t last.

    The FDA hasn’t approved Botox for these uses, but that doesn't necessarily mean they are less safe -- for example, using Botox to treat crows’ feet isn’t approved, but is a common treatment.

    Hair loss
    A few years ago, a woman approached Cutrer of the Mayo Clinic for help. She had suffered from a viral infection and afterward she had areas about the size of quarters on her scalp where she felt extreme pain. When he examined her, he noticed the painful spots were bald. He thought he would try Botox on the areas to see if it alleviated the pain. 

     “The pain went away and the hair re-grew,” he says. “If I hadn’t seen it I wouldn’t have believed it.”

    He published a paper about this case in the journal Cephalalgia. 

    While Cutrer does not recommend Botox for balding, considering there are many other treatments, he notes that after her Botox therapy stopped, she lost her hair again.

     

     

     

     

     

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  • 25
    Feb
    2011
    9:23am, EST

    Botox for your bits? Shot may smooth over sex problems

    By JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

    Wrinkle-busting Botox has long been used to rev up the sex lives of women who blame waning allure on facial lines and creases, but doctors now say the injections can help smooth problems below the belt as well.

    The newest use for botulinum Toxin A, the active ingredient in drugs such as Botox or Dysport, is to help ease painful vaginal conditions that plague women with excruciating burning sensations or constrict their muscles so tightly that sex is all but impossible.

    “Almost to a patient, they say it’s like hitting a brick wall,” said Dr. Peter T. Pacik, a New Hampshire plastic surgeon who is conducting an FDA-approved clinical trial testing the use of Botox on severe cases of vaginismus. “Most patients I treat are unable to consummate, unable to have a family.”

    Such patients – perhaps as many as 6 percent of all women worldwide – suffer from what Pacik describes as a reflex reaction to sexual penetration that causes their muscles to spasm. The problem is often rooted in fear caused by sexual abuse or a rigid upbringing, but it becomes unmistakably physical.

    “It’s uncontrollable and involuntary,” said Pacik, the author of “When Sex Seems Impossible: Stories of Vaginismus & How You Can Achieve Intimacy.”

    To treat the problem, Pacik injects the muscles at the entrance of the vagina with Botox, which works as it does in the face, interrupting nerve impulses and allowing the muscles to relax.

    “When I inject them, I put them asleep,” he said. “You would not be able to approach these people with a needle.”

    When they wake up, the women find that they are relaxed enough to allow penetration and, soon, to have normal sex with their husbands or partners. Pacik has treated 78 patients so far and all but one have virtually been cured after a single session, he said.

    His work was echoed this week by a new report in the journal Archives of Dermatologythat said a 26-year-old woman was cured of vulvodynia, an excruciating, persistent burning vaginal pain, with the use of botulinum Toxin A injections.

    And it was confirmed by Patti Dyer, a 59-year-old Maine nurse who said she has suffered from vaginismus for more than 30 years. Despite having three children, all delivered by cesarean section, Dyer said sex has always been painful to the point of tears. She and her husband, Bill, toughed it out because of their love for each other, she said. But when she heard about Pacik’s work, she had to try it.

    On Jan. 10, Dyer had the $6,300 Botox treatment. Within two weeks, she said, she and her husband were able to have sex for the first time in a dozen years. With a month, they were catching up on lost time.

    “We’re like honeymooners,” she said. “This is so exciting. This is what it should have been 30 years ago.”

    Dyer would recommend Botox down below to anyone suffering like she was. But when it comes to using the drug in her face, she draws the line.

    “Oh, no,” she said. “I’m not that vain. It’s just for the part that needs it.”

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  • 2
    Nov
    2010
    8:44am, EDT

    A wrinkle in crime? The Botox defense

    Not only can Botox protect your face from the cruel march of time, it may also keep you out of the slammer.

    When a Canadian woman named Paddi Anne Moore was pulled over by a police officer last spring and asked to blow into a breathalyzer, she huffed and she puffed, but she just couldn’t blow, according to a report in the Vancouver Sun.

    The officer gave her four chances, and, finally, charged Moore, 51, with refusing to give a breath sample.

    Moore admits, sure, she was drinking that night, but she says she simply couldn’t comply with the trooper because she’d recently received Botox injections and the wrinkle-freezer kept her from puckering her lips.

    Last week, a Vancouver judge tossed out the charge when Moore provided a letter from a doctor in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, who had performed the Botox shots.

    The doctor wrote it’s not uncommon for Botox patients to be unable "to wrap their lips around a straw or wide circumference such as a breathalyzer blow apparatus" for up to six months.

    The police officer disputes Moore’s story, maintaining, “she made no attempt to blow.”

    Before we digress into a he said/she said that’s starting to sound like the Clinton impeachment hearings, let’s ask a real expert: Is there any truth to this so-called “Botox defense” (or “defence” for you Canadians out there)?

    “It’s definitely realistic that a person couldn’t blow into a breathalyzer because they couldn’t purse their lips after Botox,” says Dr. Anthony Youn, a plastic surgeon from Troy, Mich. who runs the blog Celebrity Cosmetic Surgery, although he adds it would have to be a rather uncommon type of injection.

    “Some people will inject Botox into the muscles around the mouth to get rid of smoker’s lines, those fine vertical lines that extend around the mouth,” he says. But result probably won’t look very natural. “If a person is unable to pucker their lips, it looks strange. You may have a mouth that doesn’t move naturally, like a wax figure type of mouth.”

    Slideshow: How today's stars will age

    Youn says if the woman really did have Botox injections, her defense is conceivable. And if she didn’t have the shots, he says he’s still impressed.

    “You’ve got to hand it to her,” he says. “I’ve tried excuses to get out of speeding tickets myself.”

    Of course, the last laugh may be on Moore. According to Youn, Botox shots in the muscles around the mouth can sometimes cause other side effects.

    “Typically, we inject Botox in the upper face – the forehead, the crow’s feet, the frown lines,” he says. “My concern in injecting somebody around the mouth is that they might come back and say my mouth isn’t working right. And if those muscles aren’t moving right, you could get a droop or a drool.”

    And then people might really accuse her of drinking too much.

    Ever had a Botox mishap? Tell us about it in the comments.

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Meghan Holohan

JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

JoNel Aleccia is an award-winning national health reporter at NBC News. She has spent more than 25 years covering health, food safety, education and social issues for newspaper and online readers.

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