Mesotherapy
Mesotherapy (from Greek mesos, "middle", and therapy from Greek therapeia) is a non-invasive non-surgical technique that uses micro-injections of pharmaceutical and homeopathic preparations, plant extracts, vitamins, and other ingredients into subcutaneous fat. Mesotherapy injections allegedly target adipose fat cells, apparently by inducing lipolysis, rupture and cell death among adipocytes.[1]
Usage
There are published studies on the clinical treatments and effects of these medications and numerous cocktails of combined chemical compounds on the body have been reported in Europe and South America for several years. There is no conclusive research proof that these chemical compounds work to target adipose (fat cells) specifically. Cell lysis, resulting from the detergent action of deoxycholic, may account for any clinical effect.[2]
In 2012, a French laboratory invented a way to insert a treatment of Mesotherapy into a liquid podlet. This podlet is then plugged into a facial steamer which applies the treatment to the user's facial pores via steam. This was the first invention of its kind to enable Mesotherapy treatments directly to consumers within their own home.
Substances used include these:
- Phosphatidylcholine
- T3-T4 thyroid,
- Isoproterenol
- Aminophylline
- Pentoxifylline
- L-carnitine
- L-arginine
- Hyaluronidase
- Collagenase
- Yohimbine
- Co-enzyme cofactors
- Dimethylethanolamine
- Gerovital
- Glutathione
- Tretinoin
- Alpha lipoic acid
- Vitamin C
- Procaine
- Lidocaine
- Ginkgo biloba
- Melilotus
- C-adenosine monophosphate
- Botox
- Multiple vitamins
- Trace mineral elements
- Carbon dioxide
- Mesoglycan
History
Michel Pistor (1924–2003) performed clinical research and founded the field of mesotherapy. Multi-national research in intradermal therapy culminated with Pistor's work from 1948 to 1952 in human mesotherapy treatments. The French press coined the term Mesotherapy in 1958. The French Académie Nationale de Médecine recognized Mesotherapy as a Specialty of Medicine in 1987. The French society of Mesotherapy recognizes its use as treatment for various conditions but makes no mention of its use in plastic surgery.[3] Popular throughout European countries and South America, mesotherapy is practiced by approximately 18,000 physicians worldwide.
Criticism
Mesotherapy treatments have been performed throughout Europe, South America, and more recently the United States for over fifty years. However physicians have expressed concern over the efficacy of mesotherapy, arguing that the treatment hasn't been studied enough to make a determination. The primary issue is that mesotherapy for the treatment of cosmetic conditions hasn't been the subject of gold standard clinical trials; however the procedure has been studied for the pain relief of other ailments, such as tendonitis, tendon calcification, dental procedures, cancer, cervicobrachialgia, arthritis, lymphedema, and venous stasis.[2] Further, there have been case series and numerous medical papers on the mesotherapy as a cosmetic treatment, as well as studies that employ the ingredients used in mesotherapy.[2]
The other side of the debate is expressed by Rod Rohrich, M.D., Chairman, Dept. of Plastic Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas: "There is simply no data, no science and no information, to my knowledge, that mesotherapy works." The American Society of Plastic Surgeons issued a position statement not endorsing mesotherapy, but this non-endorsement is the subject of some controversy. Since mesotherapy isn't a surgical treatment but, rather, a non-invasive alternative to plastic surgery, the treatment competes with plastic surgery for the same patients.
The FDA cannot control the use of practitioners injecting various mixtures into patient's bodies because this practice falls under the jurisdiction of state medical boards. This is the case because the mesotherapy is considered a "procedure" by state medical boards. The FDA, on the other hand, is mandated to approve foods, dietary supplements, drugs, vaccines, biological medical products, blood products, medical devices, radiation-emitting devices, veterinary products and cosmetics.
Robin Ashinoff, speaking for the American Academy of Dermatology, says "A simple injection is giving people false hope. Everybody's looking for a quick fix. But there is no quick fix for fat or fat deposits or for cellulite." The American Society for Dermatologic Surgery informed its members in February 2005 that "further study is warranted before this technique can be endorsed."[4]
Many dermatologists and plastic surgeons are alarmed about the growing profile of mesotherapy. "No one says exactly what they put into the (syringe)," says Naomi Lawrence, a derma-surgeon at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. "One drug they often use, phosphatidylcholine, is unpredictable and causes extreme inflammation and swelling where injected. It is not a benign drug."[5]
It is currently banned in a number of South American countries. Even Brazil, which is less strict than the US in drug approvals, has banned the drug for these purposes.[5]
In Australia, an alternative therapy salon is being investigated by the Health Department after several clients developed skin abscesses on the calves, buttocks, thighs, abdomen, shoulders, face and neck from the treatment, with one patient also developing a mycobacterial infection.[6]
Following undesirable effects observed on several patients of a French practitioner, an official ratification was published in France in April 2011 to ban Mesotherapy as a method for removing fat deposits. This ban has been canceled in June 2011 by the French Council of State because the investigation proved that these undesirable effects weren't due to the Mesotherapy itself, but to the fact it had been practiced in bad conditions and without respecting the hygiene principles.[7]
Clinical studies
In a prospective study, 10 patients underwent four sessions of facial mesotherapy using multivitamins at monthly intervals. This study found that there was no clinically relevant benefit.[8]
Deoxycholic acid received FDA approval as an injectable to dissolve submental fat June 2015. This was based on a Phase III randomized trial of 2600 patients. 68.2% showed a response by measurement of the fat deposit. 81% had mild adverse reactions of bruising, swelling, pain, numbness, erythema, and firmness around the treated area.[9]
References
- Rittes, PG; Rittes, JC; Carriel, Amary MF (2006). "Injection of phosphatidylcholine in fat tissue: experimental study of local action in rabbits". Aesthetic Plast. Surg. 30 (Jul–Aug, 30(4):474-8): 474–8. doi:10.1007/s00266-005-0170-5. PMID 16858660. S2CID 21533809.
- Rotunda, Adam; Kolodney, Michael (April 2006). "Mesotherapy and Phosphatidylcholine Injections: Historical Clarification and Review" (PDF). Dermatologic Surgery. 32 (4): 465–480. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.506.2372. doi:10.1111/j.1524-4725.2006.32100.x. PMID 16681654. S2CID 9994696. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
- "French Society of Mesotherapy : What's that ?". Archived from the original on 2015-07-15. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- Matarasso, Seth; Butterwick, Kimberly; Goldberg, David; Lawrence, Naomi; Mandy, Stephen; Sadick, Neil; Wexler, Patricia; Rotunda, Adam (January 2006). "Technology report: Mesotherapy". American Society for Dermatological Surgery. Archived from the original on January 9, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
- Puente, Maria (August 4, 2004). "Critics say mesotherapy offers slim chance". USA Today. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
- "Cellulite therapy under investigation". ABC News. 2008-06-26.
- Conseil d'État : Ordonnance du 17 juin 2011, SARL Cellusonic et autres, Madame Valérie A. et autres Archived 2012-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
- Amin S, Phelps R, Goldberg D (2006). "Mesotherapy for facial skin rejuvenation: a clinical, histologic, and electron microscopic evaluation". Dermatol Surg. 32 (12): 1467–72. doi:10.1111/j.1524-4725.2006.32353.x. PMID 17199654. S2CID 20652180.
- "Deoxycholic acid injectable for submental Fat dissolution". The Dermatologist. 23 (5): 8. 2015.