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Scaling Down:
Singer Roberta Flack sheds 32 lbs. with an unusual injection therapy.
Source: People Weekly
Date: 1/20/2003
Author: Adato, Allison
It had the makings of a TV talk show nightmare.
On May 31, 1972, when her hit "The First Time Ever I Saw
Your Face" was an FM radio staple, Roberta Flack appeared
on The David Frost Show. As she recalls it, after calling Flack
"talented and amazing," Frost said, "You'd be so
beautiful if you lost weight. Don't you think so, audience?"
The audience cheered.
Now, as then, Flack laughs off the incident.
Even at 5'2" and more than 200 lbs. a year ago, she rarely
fretted about the scale. "I'm comfortable. Nobody ever said,
'Oh, that song is so beautiful, but she's so fat!' If I came out
today with Alicia, India--those kids--I wouldn't stand a chance."
Thus it wasn't merely vanity, but concerns about
her health as she passed age 60, that drove Flack, 62, to lose
more than 30 lbs. in the last 3 1/2 months. Her method: a weight-loss
program that included mesotherapy, a procedure practiced mainly
overseas that involves multiple injections into the mesoderm--the
middle layer of skin--of drugs that purportedly break down fat.
Under treatment by Manhattan doctor Lionel Bissoon, one of 20
mesotherapy practitioners in the U.S., Flack says, she noticed
results immediately. "I saw my chins disappear," she
says. "The fat dissolved in front of my eyes. I could feel
my ribs! I haven't felt them since I was 15."
What's more, she says, thanks to mesotherapy
shots of a vitamin A, C and E blend in her face, "my skin
is smoothed out. I have a younger glow. People say, 'You look
gooood!'"
So, is mesotherapy--developed 50 years ago in
France by Dr. Michel Pistor, Bissoon's mentor--a miracle cure
or an imported scam?
"It's completely legal and definitely not
quackery," says Dr. Jean-Marc Benchimol, vice president of
the French Association of Aesthetic Medicine, who has used the
technique for 15 years. But, he adds, "for weight loss, you
need a diet. The combination of mesotherapy and diet brings results."
To date, the U.S. medical establishment isn't
convinced of mesotherapy's efficacy--or its safety. Though widely
used to administer drugs, such as anti-inflammatories in the treatment
of rheumatoid arthritis, it has not been clinically proved as
a method for fat reduction.
"I would not sign up for a cocktail of
drugs to be injected into me without rigorous study," says
David B. Allison, an obesity researcher at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham. "I can't tell you it's not safe, but would
I recommend that someone I care about take it? Absolutely not.
Simply saying 'I gave it to my patients and no one complained'
is not adequate evidence."
Bissoon, 41, a native of Trinidad whose experience
has been mainly in sports medicine, counters he has safely treated
more than 300 people since 1998 and that temporary bruising is
the only downside. "All the medications [we use] are FDA
approved," he says. "Once a drug is approved, you can
use it for any reason you want."
Another of his patients, model Mila Jouravleva,
28, had three treatments that she says removed fat from her stomach
nine months ago. "At first I was skeptical," she says,
"but now I'd recommend it to anyone."
Bissoon, too, emphasizes that mesotherapy, which
he says liquefies fat cells so they can be eliminated by the body,
isn't enough by itself to melt those pounds away. "You also
need diet and exercise," he says.
And you need money--insurance doesn't cover
the procedure--along with a willingness to be jabbed with tiny
needles as many as 500 times each 30-to 60-minute session. Flack,
whose treatments cost from $250 to $750 each, shrugs off the pain.
"I've done acupuncture, and needles don't scare me,"
she says. Anyway, she admits, "the needles don't hurt as
much as not being able to get into size 8."
Flack, who lives in Manhattan, takes Bissoon's
advice about exercise and diet. "There is no such thing as
a fountain of youth," she says, but mesotherapy "inspires
you to keep going." In her case, that means five sessions
a week at the gym. "I do weight training and some aerobics,"
she says. "Now I've started with a trainer." And she's
careful about what she eats. "I cut out wheat, dairy,"
she says. "If I'm going to have something sweet, it will
be all-natural fruit, on a rye cracker, with a cup of tea, no
sugar, no honey."
Already feeling great, Flack, who is currently
touring the U.S. and working on a new album, is down to 163 lbs.
But she isn't finished. "I'm going to take off another 30,"
she vows, "and buy something gorgeous to wear."
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