new ultimate way to lose fat? mogs cryolipolysis, buccal removal?

IndianMewingChad69

IndianMewingChad69

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this is newfound methoid being tested, but doesent seem too hard to be replicated by an autist

How cool is this: the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) laboratory that invented cryolipolisis or “Coolsculpting,” a popular nonsurgical method for reducing fat under the skin, is developing a new form of the technology that can selectively reduce fat almost anywhere in the body using a safe, injectable ice solution or “slurry.”


The technology, not yet approved for use in humans, is designed for removal of fat in the abdomen or other parts of the body — virtually anywhere that can be reached with a hypodermic needle. Fat is a normal part of our bodies, but in excess or with some diseases can be life-threatening.


The new technique is described in a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. As one of the reviewers of the paper said, “this treatment has the potential to become one of the most performed cosmetic procedures in plastic surgery practice.”


“The appeal of this technique is that it’s easy and convenient to do,” says lead author Lilit Garibyan, investigator in the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School. “With Coolsculpting, which is a topical cooling technique, the patient has to sit there for almost an hour for enough heat to diffuse from the fat underneath the skin. With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”


Cryolipolysis is currently the leading noninvasive fat removal technology because of its minor side effects and noninvasive nature. The Coolsculpting method is limited, however, by the amount of fat that can be removed per treatment, and is not practical for reaching more deeply seated fat surrounding organs or other body structures.


“With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”

— Lilit Garibyan

The MGH team’s innovative spin on the technique involves the use of an injectable ice “slurry,” a sterile solution of normal saline and glycerol (a common food ingredient) containing approximately 20 percent to 40 percent small ice particles, similar in texture to slush. The solution can be injected directly into fat deposits, causing the fat cells (adipocytes) to crystallize and die and fat deposits to shrink. The killed adipocytes are gradually eliminated by the body over a period of weeks. “One of the cool things about this is how the injected slurry causes selective effects on fat,” said Rox Anderson, a co-author and leader of the Wellman Center. “Even if the slurry is injected into other tissue such as muscle, there is no significant injury.”


As the investigators report, injection of the ice solution into pigs resulted in a 55 percent reduction in fat thickness compared to that of pigs injected with the same but melted ice solution. There was no damage to skin or muscle at the injection site, and no systemic side effects or abnormalities seen.


Unlike topical cooling, slurry injection can target and remove fat tissue at essentially any depth and any site that can be accessed by a needle or catheter. Injection of physiological ice slurry could be a transformative method for nonsurgical body contouring.


Other authors of the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery paper include Sara Moradi Tuchayi, Emilia Javorsky, William A. Farinelli, Ying Wang, Martin Purschke, Josh Tam. The research was done at the Wellman Center at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Peiyun Ni from Harvard Medical School, and Christine G. Lian from the Brigham & Women’s Hospital Department of Pathology.


 
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botb? @enchanted_elixir
 
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Just eat less
 
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4
 
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this is me to fuckers who view and cant spend 1 sec to react, niggers
28729.jpg
 
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Great info, thanks for sharing. Any idea how long until this is expected to be on the market?
 
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Great info, thanks for sharing. Any idea how long until this is expected to be on the market?
i dont know why it isnt already out tbh, good question
 
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@Ekil73_YT r/FatBusting is a helpful community i found. cryo could be one of greatest looksmaxxes imo

but maybe harmful to some, copy pasted from old lookism thread

I made a seperate post about this but I might as well post it in here also:
This website has a bunch of info on this, just jump to section 15 though for the diy: https://fellrnr.com/wiki/CoolSculpting
Basically what you do is ice the area of fat for 1-3 hours with an ice pack, and just watch out for frostbite. There are studies on this and results and everything. The results dont happen immediately though, they take a couple of weeks to start. At the moment I think this may actually be the only way to kill of the fat that causes hollow cheeks, naturally or surgically.

There is one side effect to this that could happen, aside from frostbite, and that paradoxical adipose hyperplasia (PAH). PAH is where some of the adipose tissue does die off after the coolsculpting, but the remainder actually increases in size after about 6-9 months to the point where it looks like you have more fat than you did before. This seems to mainly happen in Hispanic patients, and the rate is pretty low iirc (somewhere around 1/1000 or something). Scientists dont know the cause of PAH, but after doing some research I've got my own theory.

Studies have shown that results decrease after each successive coolsculpting use (heres the study: ). However, the space between each coolsculpting in this study was 3 months. What happens in coolsculpting, is that some of the fat cells die off immediately (necrosis), but some of them go into programmed cell death (apoptosis) due to the inflammation the cold causes. My theory is that the fat cells that dont die off after coolsculpting actually grow more resistant to the inflammation caused by the cold, and this is most likely due to them being given the time and environment to heal. Just like other tissues in the body (muscle, tendons), if you damage it a little, but you give it time to heal in a healthy environment, itll come back stronger than before.

There was another case study on a woman who got PAH, and her time between each coolsculpting was around one month (she only got two). So what I think happens in PAH, is the same thing, the fat that doesnt die off grows more resistant, but the cold and inflammation triggers a mechanism in certain people's fat cells that causes them to also grow in size after a while. However the resistance nor the growth can not be done if those fat cells are in a consistent state of stress and inflammation.

So here's my theory to prevent PAH, you have to coolsculpt consistently (atleast 2-3 a week) for a few months. The goal is to keep the fat in a constant state of stress and inflammation, and at the very least this will cause a lot of fat to die off.

This was the said users results, take from it what you will:
Before:

ASPt5Mq.jpg



After:

pmYahvY.jpg




W9N1cq9.jpg



User claims to have only iced the right side of his face, which is where any results are visible tbh.


As you can see, he appears to have lost some Buccal fat, but again its not too much but slightly noticeable.
 
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Holy shit i feel sad for you nigger
Such a high effort thread still got 2 reacts :lul: :lul:
 
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this is newfound methoid being tested, but doesent seem too hard to be replicated by an autist

How cool is this: the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) laboratory that invented cryolipolisis or “Coolsculpting,” a popular nonsurgical method for reducing fat under the skin, is developing a new form of the technology that can selectively reduce fat almost anywhere in the body using a safe, injectable ice solution or “slurry.”


The technology, not yet approved for use in humans, is designed for removal of fat in the abdomen or other parts of the body — virtually anywhere that can be reached with a hypodermic needle. Fat is a normal part of our bodies, but in excess or with some diseases can be life-threatening.


The new technique is described in a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. As one of the reviewers of the paper said, “this treatment has the potential to become one of the most performed cosmetic procedures in plastic surgery practice.”


“The appeal of this technique is that it’s easy and convenient to do,” says lead author Lilit Garibyan, investigator in the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School. “With Coolsculpting, which is a topical cooling technique, the patient has to sit there for almost an hour for enough heat to diffuse from the fat underneath the skin. With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”


Cryolipolysis is currently the leading noninvasive fat removal technology because of its minor side effects and noninvasive nature. The Coolsculpting method is limited, however, by the amount of fat that can be removed per treatment, and is not practical for reaching more deeply seated fat surrounding organs or other body structures.


“With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”

— Lilit Garibyan

The MGH team’s innovative spin on the technique involves the use of an injectable ice “slurry,” a sterile solution of normal saline and glycerol (a common food ingredient) containing approximately 20 percent to 40 percent small ice particles, similar in texture to slush. The solution can be injected directly into fat deposits, causing the fat cells (adipocytes) to crystallize and die and fat deposits to shrink. The killed adipocytes are gradually eliminated by the body over a period of weeks. “One of the cool things about this is how the injected slurry causes selective effects on fat,” said Rox Anderson, a co-author and leader of the Wellman Center. “Even if the slurry is injected into other tissue such as muscle, there is no significant injury.”


As the investigators report, injection of the ice solution into pigs resulted in a 55 percent reduction in fat thickness compared to that of pigs injected with the same but melted ice solution. There was no damage to skin or muscle at the injection site, and no systemic side effects or abnormalities seen.


Unlike topical cooling, slurry injection can target and remove fat tissue at essentially any depth and any site that can be accessed by a needle or catheter. Injection of physiological ice slurry could be a transformative method for nonsurgical body contouring.


Other authors of the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery paper include Sara Moradi Tuchayi, Emilia Javorsky, William A. Farinelli, Ying Wang, Martin Purschke, Josh Tam. The research was done at the Wellman Center at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Peiyun Ni from Harvard Medical School, and Christine G. Lian from the Brigham & Women’s Hospital Department of Pathology.


I remember I made a very similar post to this 6 months ago, I was the first to mention this technique. And I got 0 replies and 0 reactions 🥲
 
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@Xangsane should i do this on my bum if big bumcel like u?

@Ritalincel mum big bum
 
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this is newfound methoid being tested, but doesent seem too hard to be replicated by an autist

How cool is this: the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) laboratory that invented cryolipolisis or “Coolsculpting,” a popular nonsurgical method for reducing fat under the skin, is developing a new form of the technology that can selectively reduce fat almost anywhere in the body using a safe, injectable ice solution or “slurry.”


The technology, not yet approved for use in humans, is designed for removal of fat in the abdomen or other parts of the body — virtually anywhere that can be reached with a hypodermic needle. Fat is a normal part of our bodies, but in excess or with some diseases can be life-threatening.


The new technique is described in a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. As one of the reviewers of the paper said, “this treatment has the potential to become one of the most performed cosmetic procedures in plastic surgery practice.”


“The appeal of this technique is that it’s easy and convenient to do,” says lead author Lilit Garibyan, investigator in the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School. “With Coolsculpting, which is a topical cooling technique, the patient has to sit there for almost an hour for enough heat to diffuse from the fat underneath the skin. With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”


Cryolipolysis is currently the leading noninvasive fat removal technology because of its minor side effects and noninvasive nature. The Coolsculpting method is limited, however, by the amount of fat that can be removed per treatment, and is not practical for reaching more deeply seated fat surrounding organs or other body structures.


“With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”

— Lilit Garibyan

The MGH team’s innovative spin on the technique involves the use of an injectable ice “slurry,” a sterile solution of normal saline and glycerol (a common food ingredient) containing approximately 20 percent to 40 percent small ice particles, similar in texture to slush. The solution can be injected directly into fat deposits, causing the fat cells (adipocytes) to crystallize and die and fat deposits to shrink. The killed adipocytes are gradually eliminated by the body over a period of weeks. “One of the cool things about this is how the injected slurry causes selective effects on fat,” said Rox Anderson, a co-author and leader of the Wellman Center. “Even if the slurry is injected into other tissue such as muscle, there is no significant injury.”


As the investigators report, injection of the ice solution into pigs resulted in a 55 percent reduction in fat thickness compared to that of pigs injected with the same but melted ice solution. There was no damage to skin or muscle at the injection site, and no systemic side effects or abnormalities seen.


Unlike topical cooling, slurry injection can target and remove fat tissue at essentially any depth and any site that can be accessed by a needle or catheter. Injection of physiological ice slurry could be a transformative method for nonsurgical body contouring.


Other authors of the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery paper include Sara Moradi Tuchayi, Emilia Javorsky, William A. Farinelli, Ying Wang, Martin Purschke, Josh Tam. The research was done at the Wellman Center at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Peiyun Ni from Harvard Medical School, and Christine G. Lian from the Brigham & Women’s Hospital Department of Pathology.


So high IQ so little react
 
this is newfound methoid being tested, but doesent seem too hard to be replicated by an autist

How cool is this: the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) laboratory that invented cryolipolisis or “Coolsculpting,” a popular nonsurgical method for reducing fat under the skin, is developing a new form of the technology that can selectively reduce fat almost anywhere in the body using a safe, injectable ice solution or “slurry.”


The technology, not yet approved for use in humans, is designed for removal of fat in the abdomen or other parts of the body — virtually anywhere that can be reached with a hypodermic needle. Fat is a normal part of our bodies, but in excess or with some diseases can be life-threatening.


The new technique is described in a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. As one of the reviewers of the paper said, “this treatment has the potential to become one of the most performed cosmetic procedures in plastic surgery practice.”


“The appeal of this technique is that it’s easy and convenient to do,” says lead author Lilit Garibyan, investigator in the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School. “With Coolsculpting, which is a topical cooling technique, the patient has to sit there for almost an hour for enough heat to diffuse from the fat underneath the skin. With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”


Cryolipolysis is currently the leading noninvasive fat removal technology because of its minor side effects and noninvasive nature. The Coolsculpting method is limited, however, by the amount of fat that can be removed per treatment, and is not practical for reaching more deeply seated fat surrounding organs or other body structures.


“With this new technique the doctor can do a simple injection that takes just less than a minute, the patient can go home, and then the fat gradually disappears.”

— Lilit Garibyan

The MGH team’s innovative spin on the technique involves the use of an injectable ice “slurry,” a sterile solution of normal saline and glycerol (a common food ingredient) containing approximately 20 percent to 40 percent small ice particles, similar in texture to slush. The solution can be injected directly into fat deposits, causing the fat cells (adipocytes) to crystallize and die and fat deposits to shrink. The killed adipocytes are gradually eliminated by the body over a period of weeks. “One of the cool things about this is how the injected slurry causes selective effects on fat,” said Rox Anderson, a co-author and leader of the Wellman Center. “Even if the slurry is injected into other tissue such as muscle, there is no significant injury.”


As the investigators report, injection of the ice solution into pigs resulted in a 55 percent reduction in fat thickness compared to that of pigs injected with the same but melted ice solution. There was no damage to skin or muscle at the injection site, and no systemic side effects or abnormalities seen.


Unlike topical cooling, slurry injection can target and remove fat tissue at essentially any depth and any site that can be accessed by a needle or catheter. Injection of physiological ice slurry could be a transformative method for nonsurgical body contouring.


Other authors of the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery paper include Sara Moradi Tuchayi, Emilia Javorsky, William A. Farinelli, Ying Wang, Martin Purschke, Josh Tam. The research was done at the Wellman Center at MGH and the Department of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Peiyun Ni from Harvard Medical School, and Christine G. Lian from the Brigham & Women’s Hospital Department of Pathology.


Will try to replicate thanks OP. Be glad it has 0 reacts.
 

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