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Friday, December 6, 2024

'Popular cosmetic procedure can turn your fat into a tumor'

 A personal injury attorney who specializes in beauty products and services is warning against the cosmetic treatment she’d never do again due to its scary and “horrific” side effect — which is a lot more common than people realize.

Whitney Ray Di Bona, owner of Beauty Justice, LLC, railed against CoolSculpting, a popular procedure that can make your body fat grow into unsightly (but noncancerous) tumors.

Beauty lawyer Whitney Ray Di Bona said CoolSculpting has a “horrific” side effect in which the patient’s fat expands into a “tumor.”Real Alex Clark/ Youtube

Appearing on the Culture Apothecary podcast with Alex Clark, Di Bona had an unequivocal answer for the the med spa industry “sham” she’d warn against.

“CoolSculpting is this machine that is supposed to freeze your fat,” she explained.

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Introduced in 2010, CoolSculpting is a cryolipolysis or fat-freezing method that targets visible fat bulges in places like the stomach, thighs, arms and chin. It works by creating cold-induced apoptosis, or fat cell death, in specific areas.

If everything goes right, after several treatments, fat cells die and melt away. But sometimes, things go wrong.

“It has a horrific side effect called paradoxical adipose hyperplasia, where instead of the fat cells shrinking, they actually expand and grow into a tumor,” Di Bona said.

Those noncancerous “tumors” are made of big, hardened fat that sometimes grow in the shape of the CoolSculpting applicator. The disfigurement can develop almost immediately or up to six months after treatment and requires surgery to correct.

CoolSculpting freezes fat to call cell death, and those dead fat cells are then reabsorbed into the body. But in some cases it can cause paradoxical adipose hyperplasia.Daniel CHETRONI – stock.adobe.com

In 2022, supermodel Linda Evangelista came forward with her own story of paradoxical adipose hyperplasia (PAH), telling fans that they hadn’t seen her in a while because she’d gone into hiding over it.

She wrote on Instagram that she was “brutally disfigured,” saying that it “increased, not decreased, my fat cells and left me permanently deformed even after undergoing two painful, unsuccessful corrective surgeries.

“PAH has not only destroyed my livelihood, it has sent me into a cycle of deep depression, profound sadness, and the lowest depths of self-loathing. In the process, I have become a recluse,” she added.

Supermodel Linda Evangelista previously sued the makers of CoolSculpting, saying it left her disfigured.Getty Images for WSJ. Magazine Innovators Awards

Evangelista sued Zeltiq Aesthetics, a unit of Allergan Aesthetics, the makers of CoolSculpt, for $50 million, ultimately settling for an undisclosed amount.

She’s not the only one. The FDA had an increase in reports after Evangelista’s suit — 1,100 in 2021, more than in the previous 10 years combined. In 2022, there were 1,900 reports.

Actress Rae-Shan Barclift from East Orange, NJ, said she had a similar experience after spending $2,700 on a session for her stomach, waist and chin.

“CoolSculpting left me with something I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy,” she said.

Di Bona, the beauty lawyer, admitted that she did CoolSculpting herself a decade ago and recalls how every med spa was offering it at the time — but she had no clear warning of what could go wrong.

“Nobody told me that that was a possibility, and so many people that have had that happened say the same thing, like, ‘Nobody warned me that this was a side effect, nobody told me that this could happen,'” she recalled.

What’s more, she said, the company behind CoolSculpting were “kind of fudging the numbers” on how common the side effect is. Allergan Aesthetics claimed that PAH occurred in only 0.033% of treatments, or about 1 in 3,000.

But a 2020 study said it’s “likely being underreported and misdiagnosed,” and the New York Times reported last year that the risk is much higher than CoolSculpting said, according to interviews with more than a dozen doctors.

They even cited a 2017 study in which doctors reported the side effect in 1 out of every 100 patients.

CoolSculpting’s latest warning is that rare side effects like “visible enlargement in the treated area” can happen in 1 to 10 out of 10,000 — and that’s treatments, not patients, so patients going for multiple rounds increase their risk.

Di Bona says these numbers are too high, declaring: “We’re not doing CoolSculpting.”

https://nypost.com/2024/12/06/lifestyle/cosmetic-procedure-side-effect-can-turn-your-fat-into-a-tumor/

CVS removes execs' photos from its website after UnitedHealthcare CEO’s assassination

 CVS Health has pulled photos of its executives off its website as the manhunt for UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson’s killer continues. 

The company confirmed to FOX Business on Friday that all photos of its executive leadership have been removed. CVS declined any additional comment.

UnitedHealthcare’s leadership page has also been taken down, with the URL now redirected to the company’s homepage.

The move comes as the health care industry is on heightened alert after Thompson was gunned down outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan on Wednesday, in what police are calling a “premediated, targeted attack.”

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The Hilton was hosting UnitedHealth’s annual investors conference, and police said Thompson had been in town from Minnesota since Monday and was staying across the street.

Police are still trying to track down the killer and are offering a $10,000 reward for information that leads to an arrest.

CVS sign
In the wake of Brian Thompson’s assassination, CVS has removed images of its executives from its website.Christopher Sadowski
While the NYPD has not yet disclosed a possible motive behind the killing, the nation’s largest health insurance company has come under fire in recent months. In particular, it is facing scrutiny for allegedly wrongfully denying claims.

https://nypost.com/2024/12/06/us-news/cvs-removes-photos-of-executives-from-its-website-in-wake-of-unitedhealthcare-ceos-assassination/

US to drop to 66th place in life expectancy rankings — even worse for ‘good health’ years

 Life expectancy in the US already falls behind many other developed countries, putting us in 49th place in global rankings in 2022 — but a new report says we’ll drop even further to 66th place in 2050.

That year, Americans are expected to live 80.4 years on average, up from 79.9 years in 2035 and 78.3 years in 2022, according to an analysis by the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) published this week in the Lancet.

That slight increase has us lagging behind other nations, and researchers are blaming a looming “public health crisis of unimaginable scale.”

But life expectancies aren’t equal across the US: New York is predicted to have the highest life expectancy in the US by 2050, ranking 41st in the world, which would be a drop from 33rd place in 2022.

New York is predicted to have the highest life expectancy in the US by 2050, ranking 41st in the world, which would be a drop from 33rd place in 2022.Rawf8 – stock.adobe.com

IHME noted that life expectancy gains nationwide are not keeping pace with other countries. The US’ global ranking is expected to decline to 66th in 2050 among 204 countries and territories.

“In spite of modest increases in life expectancy overall, our models forecast health improvements slowing down due to rising rates of obesity, which is a serious risk factor to many chronic diseases and forecasted to leap to levels never before seen,” said IHME Director Christopher J.L. Murray.

“The rise in obesity and overweight rates in the US, with IHME forecasting over 260 million people affected by 2050, signals a public health crisis of unimaginable scale,” added Murray, co-senior author of the study.

More than 100 million American adults are obese, with over 22 million adults considered severely obese, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Obesity significantly raises the risk of Type 2 diabetes, heart diseasehigh blood pressure, high cholesterol, certain kinds of cancer and stroke, among other chronic conditions.

Eliminating risk factors like obesity, high blood sugar and high blood pressure by 2050 could prolong 12.4 million lives, according to the new analysis.Andrey Popov – stock.adobe.com

IHME figured out that eliminating risk factors like obesity, high blood sugar and high blood pressure by 2050 could prolong 12.4 million lives.

IHME also analyzed the US’ health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE), which is the average number of years a person can expect to live in good health.

The US’ HALE global ranking is forecast to drop from 80th in 2022 to 108th by 2050.

“The rapid decline of the US in global rankings from 2022 to 2050 rings the alarm for immediate action,” said co-senior author Stein Emil Vollset, an affiliate professor from IHME. “The US must change course and find new and better health strategies and policies that slow down the decline in future health outcomes.”

US women’s health, in particular, is expected to experience little to no gains over the next few decades.

IHME predicted female HALE to decline by 2050 in 20 states, including Ohio, Tennessee and Indiana.

IHME said decreases in female and male death rates tied to heart disease, strokes and diabetes have been partially offset by the rising rate of fatal drug overdoses.

“The opioid epidemic is far from over, and greater effectiveness and continued expansion of programs to prevent and treat drug use are still needed,” said lead study author Ali Mokdad from IHME.

Smoking, too, remains a problem. IHME estimated that 2.1 million lives could be prolonged by 2050 if smoking rates were drastically reduced.

Exercising, eating a healthy diet and getting a good education may help increase your life expectancy.Galyna Andrushko – stock.adobe.com

This is not the first time public health experts have sounded the alarm about stalled US life expectancy gains. Recent research claimed the biggest boosts to longevity are in the rearview mirror because modern medicine is yielding only slight improvements.

University of Illinois Chicago professor S. Jay Olshansky, who authored that study, told The Post that you can try to increase your life expectancy by exercising, eating a healthy diet, getting a good education, taking medications prescribed by doctors and avoiding cigarettes and recreational drugs.

https://nypost.com/2024/12/06/lifestyle/us-expected-to-drop-to-66th-place-in-life-expectancy-rankings/