A ^Retired Plastic Surgeon's Notebook

Tag: Botox injections


I’ve given up Botox for now. I need my scowl!

April 1st, 2013 — 4:59pm

Seattle Plastic Surgeon admits that scowling has it’s place, especially when teaching teenage sons to drive.

Today I had a patient ask me about my personal use of Botox.  Maybe it was a hint?  My scowl lines are alive and well right in the middle of my forehead and I have no plans to eradicate them anytime soon.

Mama lion scowling.

Mama don’t like it when you forget to signal.

I have found that my scowl has been quite useful the past 6 months.  You see, my twin sons are learning to drive and my scowl saves me a lot of verbal nagging.

My sons have excellent peripheral vision and their eyes are constantly darting from the rear view mirror to the side mirrors to the road and to the look on my face as they grind the gears, slam on the brakes and otherwise torture their mother and her car.   I’m not sure if they would be quite so responsive if their mother had that nice serene look that I get when I’m nice and Botoxed up.

So if you are thinking about Botox, make sure that your scowl really is something you can do without.  If you have teenagers, you may want to wait until they are out of the house!

Thanks for reading.  Dr. Lisa Lynn Sowder

Botox, Uncategorized

Happy Birthday to BOTOX! It’s been 10 years since the FDA approved Botox for cosmetic use.

April 23rd, 2012 — 5:20pm

Seattle Plastic Surgeon shares a very quick history of Botox. 

My very first Botox patient. I injected her scowl lines and was met with great success.

I remember, years ago,  hearing about doctors injecting each other with Botox to reduce their scowl lines and thinking:  how crazy is that?????

But the anecdotal reports kept coming in and in 1992 a Canadian ophthalmologist, Dr. Jean Carruthers and her husband, Alastair, published their finding that Botox is effective in treating moderate of severe glabellar frown lines (those nasty vertical scowl creases right between the eyes).  Dr. Carruthers got the idea to try this because Botox had been used for years by ophthalmologists to treat involuntary squinting.    She and other astute opthalmologists noticed that the areas injected with Botox would loose their wrinkles. 

Botox quickly became one of the most widely researched pharaceuticals in the world with more than 2500 articles in scientific and medical  journals written about it.   Ten years after the paper by Drs. Carruthers and Carruthers, the FDA approved Botox for cosmetic use and well, the rest is history.  Botox is now approved for 25 unique indications in 85 countries.  In 2011, according to the American Society fo Plastic Surgeons’ procedural statistics, 5.6 million Americans opted for Botox treatment.  Some days when Botox is flying off my freezer shelf, I feel like I’m the one doing all those injections!

It is the scientific serendipity of the Botox story that I find so interesting.  It makes me wonder what other  discovery is just an astute observation away from being the NEXT BIG THING.

Thanks for reading!  Dr. Lisa Lynn Sowder

Botox, Now That's Cool

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