Dispelling Any Concerns About The Safety Of Botox

Dispelling Any Concerns About the Safety of BOTOX

by

Dr Barry Eppley

Recent media releases that I have read on the use of BOTOX in children with neuromuscular disorders does not accurately represent its safety record in cosmetic applications. To allay potential patient concerns, it is useful to review some of the existing information to clear up any confusion created by these internet and paper reports on this very popular cosmetic treatment.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vfd6tVqCS5s[/youtube]

BOTOX cosmetic (Botulinum Toxin Type A) is produced and sold by the proprietary company, Allergan, based in Irvine California. It was initially approved for the treatment of excessive eyelid twitching 18 years ago and its approval for the treatment of vertical brow lines was 6 years ago. Many millions of cosmetic patients have been treated globally and the manufacturer reports that more than 13 million doses have been given since 2002. According to the American Society of Plastic Surgery, BOTOX cosmetic is the #1 cosmetic procedure done in the U.S. since 2002 with over 3 million doses given in 2006. With over 3,000 published medical reports and a large number of clinical trial subjects studied, a welth of safety information is available. Significant adverse reactions to the use of BOTOX, despite the large amount of doses given and the patients treated cosmetic is extremely rare.Any true allergies to its use have not been reported. To date, there has never been a single reported death associated with its use either. These cosmetic experiences must be contrasted with the media reports where its use has been in limb spasticity, which is not an FDA-approved application. Substantially larger doses (up to 100 times) are given in these neuromuscular uses compared to what is given for cosmetic wrinkle treatments and are injected in these juvenile patients who are often sickly from their neuromuscular disease. These two patient populations, and their indications, are simply not the same. The FDA appears to recognize these differences and has issued no stoppage of its use for any application to any health care provider at the present time. The accurate portrayal of the safety data on BOTOX cosmetic should provide great comfort to those patients who regularly receive aesthetic treatments or to those considering it in the near future.

Dr Barry Eppley is a board-certified plastic surgeon who writes a daily blog on trends in plastic surgery at

exploreplasticsurgery.com

. He is in private practice in Indianapolis, Indiana.

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