New Straits Times

Cosmetic acupunctur­e, anyone?

Will you stick 95 needles in your face to look younger? Marianne Power did just that and is amazed by the results

-

Gwyneth Paltrow is among the celebritie­s who is a fan of cosmetic accupunctu­re.

Cosmetic accupunctu­re is getting popular. towards blood circulatio­n and cardiovasc­ular issues. He also sees problems with my digestive system — another of my father’s weak spots. He thinks I’m anaemic, have candida, and that my puffy face is a result of suffering fluid retention.

This is a lot of news to be given in a facial. But what does all that have to do with my frown lines?

“Beauty comes from inside,” he says. “If you don’t address these issues, it does not matter how many needles you stick in your face, your skin is not going to look healthy.”

PROPER CIRCULATIO­N

Next, he inserts needles in my feet, legs and hands. He says the needles in my body are to help boost blood flow, increasing the amount of oxygen my skin gets.

“Without proper circulatio­n, your skin is not getting enough nutrients. When blood is moving there is life, when blood stops, then we die.”

Good circulatio­n will also help boost my digestion and drain any fluids in my face.

Tsagaris places 95 needles in my face. It takes about 30 minutes. Most don’t hurt, just those around my mouth and nostrils.

‘Some of these needles are going quite deep, up to a couple of millimetre­s into the bottom epidermis. The idea is that these needles will break collagen fibres, and then the skin reacts to this trauma by triggering a repair response. The tiny, dehydrated collagen fibres that broke will heal themselves, double in size, and become firmer and stronger.’

The needles are also doing the same with elastin fibres, he says, as well as boosting production of hyaluronic acid, which is what keeps our skin moist and plump.

“As a result, this treatment is not only treating the surface, it’s helping your skin to regenerate,” says Tsagarisn.

As he speaks, I feel the blood rush to my face and it does seem as if my skin is coming back to life. This is the opposite with Botox.

“’When you have Botox, you are freezing muscles, which means you’re not moving them. Over time this causes those muscles to atrophy — lose strength and volume so your forehead goes flat. After about four or five treatments, your forehead muscles become so weak the Botox will no longer work. Then you’re into the territory of getting facelifts.

“When your muscles are frozen, blood is not able to come through the muscles, which cuts off oxygen to the skin, meaning the skin is less nourished and becomes drier and paler. It’s like your body can no longer support it,” he says.

“I’m not against Botox. If you have frown lines they will vanish, but in the long term it does not benefit your skin. I’ve also seen people develop wrinkles in funny areas around the nose — because your skin has to bend†somewhere.”

Again, it makes sense. I hang on his every word as he finishes off with some LED light therapy (which is supposed to increase the skin’s ability to heal itself) and lectures me on sugar.

I have a sweet tooth and he warns me that it’s ruining my skin because sugar destroys collagen.

He also tells me I have great sensitivit­y to male hormones, which is causing oiliness, which in turn causes my ageing, enlarged pores.

When I ask why I have that sensitivit­y, he tells me it’s prolonged stress.

“Stress affects hormones but it also makes you want to eat sugar which exacerbate­s the problem. Do you drink a lot of coffee too?’

When I say yes, he sighs. Coffee is dehydratin­g.

On the upside, he says I am lucky to have strong bone structure and firm cheeks. “As we get older, our bones shrink, which can lead to a hollow look in the face.’

He tells me I must never complain about my hamster cheeks and I promise him I won’t. And then we’re done.

When I look in the mirror, I am shocked by how different my face looks. It is lifted, toned and has an evenness and glow that it did not have before. What’s more, I feel strangely perky, almost euphoric. I practicall­y bounce out of the clinic as he shouts after me that I won’t really notice the difference until the next morning.

He’s right. The next morning, my skin looks smoother and brighter. My forehead lines are much weaker and my eyebrows look higher up on my face.

That night, I have dinner with my mum, my toughest critic. She asks what I’ve done to my face because it doesn’t look :pink and blotchy” like usual. Charming.

To reap the benefits, Tsagaris says I need to have this treatment regularly — twice a month for a couple of months and once a month after that.

This is a bit of an issue as he charges £245 (RM1,350) an hour - but oh my goodness, I want to go back.

We may not all be able to spend hundreds to have needles stuck in our face, but we can all eat better and go on long walks to boost circulatio­n — and those things will probably have just as much as an effect on our skin as the latest beauty treatment. In a dream world, I’d be doing both.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia