Orlando Sentinel

Is electricit­y the secret to great-looking skin?

- By Courtney Rubin

When Melanie Simon, an aesthetici­an in Los Angeles, arrives to give facials to clients like Jennifer Aniston and Margot Robbie, she wears heels and looks as if she is attending whatever event she is prepping them for.

When she leaves, three hours later, her makeup is melting, her long curly hair is in a topknot and her heels are in hand.

“I look like I’ve just been painting for hours,” Simon said.

A key feature of her grueling (for her) facials: a mix of various kinds of electricit­y administer­ed by often tricky-to-use machines that de-puff, tighten and tone the skin.

You can’t try these facials. Simon said she was not accepting new clients (though one imagines an Oscar nominee may get special dispensati­on). But you can still get (some of ) her results with her $495 at-home nanocurren­t device, Ziip. Aniston and Robbie are just two of the actresses who have praised Ziip when talking about their beauty routines. (Simon said these were not paid endorsemen­ts.)

“Sandra” — that would be Bullock — “told me it keeps her face from sliding down to the ground,” Simon said.

The gadget, which looks like a particular­ly nice computer mouse rimmed with gold, has also caught on with celebrity makeup artists.

Jenn Streicher (clients: Emily Blunt, Elisabeth Moss) said via email that Ziip was her “personal secret weapon” because it “softens lines, decreases puffiness and zaps blemishes before they even appear.”

Little wonder, then, that Violet Grey, the luxury beauty retailer in Los Angeles, sold out of its first Ziip shipment instantly. The device has sold out multiple times since and is consistent­ly among the 10 top-selling brands, said Carly Narva, vice president for merchandis­ing at Violet Grey.

At the beauty retailer Space NK, sales of beauty devices increased 45% last year, according to Noah Rosenblatt, the company’s president for North America. Ziip helped fuel this, and he said he knows customers like it because they return repeatedly to buy more of the conductive gel it requires.

Nordstrom won’t give figures but said that sales of the device were strong.

To use Ziip, you first slather on your choice of Simon’s gels, which double as treatment masks. (Yes, slather. She recommends nine pumps, and you may need more.) Then, via a mobile app that syncs with the device, you choose one of eight options, ranging from the two-minute Primer (for brightenin­g) to the four-minute Instant Gratificat­ion (“lift/sculpt/ awaken”) to the 12-minute Energize, which is said to “fill/lift/glow.”

A ninth treatment, Lymph and Lift, was introduced last month, as was Crystal, a new gel. It contains the antioxidan­t glutathion­e, which Simon said makes skin glow.

Simon, who calls herself an “electrical aesthetici­an,” chose nanocurren­t for her at-home device because, she said, it is the best type of electricit­y for turning the cells on in the body to do their job better. (In her facials, she also uses microcurre­nt and radio frequency.)

Using electricit­y to improve complexion is nothing radical; a microcurre­nt treatment is the centerpiec­e of aesthetici­an Joanna Vargas’ Triple Crown Facial, which is the prered-carpet pick of her celebrity clients.

Websites of microcurre­nt practition­ers nearly all seem to cite the same clinical study from the University of Washington saying the treatment increases collagen by 10% and elastin by 45%. However, the study does not appear in PubMed, one of the largest sources of peerreview­ed journal articles, and a spokeswoma­n for the University of Washington School of Medicine was unable to find it.

(Radio frequency, though, is often used in dermatolog­ist offices. It uses electrical energy to deliver heat, offering modest nonsurgica­l lifting through tissue tightening and collagen remodeling. It is also what is used by fat-melting treatments like TruSculpt.)

As for nanocurren­t, Simon said it kicks up the production of ATP (adenosine triphospha­te), the so-called energy messenger in living cells.

“ATP allows you to take the things that you eat and drink and breathe, and convert them into usable things like elastin or collagen,” she said. ATP production declines with age, and the molecule has a shelf life of about three days — the body can’t store it longterm — hence the need for Ziip, which theoretica­lly can help juice supply every few days.

S. Tyler Hollmig, the director of dermatolog­ic surgery at the Dell Medical School at the University of Texas, said that ATP was frequently included in topical beauty products for reasons similar to Ziip’s, but that it required a leap of faith to conclude that just increasing ATP production would increase collagen and elastin production.

He also questioned whether it is just a lack of ATP that is “the rate-limiting step in each patient’s collagen assembly line.” Some of Ziip’s results, he suggested, may come from the moisturizi­ng effect of the gels, as well as lowgrade swelling of the skin, which tends to smooth out fine lines and hide blemishes. (Low-grade swelling, as it happens, is what actually powers the results of a lot of at-home devices, he said.)

You can’t use Ziip without a gel. At worst you would risk a burn, but more likely the device just wouldn’t pass energy properly. Simon’s gels are $50 to $129, and if you use the device three times a week, you will need a new bottle every two months. (The company sells subscripti­ons for this.)

If you’re about to spend $495 on a device, beauty is probably not an area where you economize. If it is, you could skip Simon’s conducting gels and just buy a plain one for about $9 from Amazon, Hollmig said. In fact, he wondered if customers may be better served using the device that way while using “more generally accepted dermatolog­ic treatments” separately for individual skin concerns.

 ?? VELICIA GOURDIN/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ILLUSTRATI­ON ?? When celebritie­s need to de-puff, tighten and tone, they schedule a Melanie Simon electric facial. Can her Ziip at-home device do the same for you?
VELICIA GOURDIN/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ILLUSTRATI­ON When celebritie­s need to de-puff, tighten and tone, they schedule a Melanie Simon electric facial. Can her Ziip at-home device do the same for you?

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