| Rodeo Drive Chin Rejuvenation
Compared with the routine facelift, The Rodeo Drive Chin Rejuvenation is more affordable, provides a shorter and easier recovery, and can have remarkable benefits for suitable candidates. The Chin Liposuction is ideal for both men and women. But Dr. Krieger says men, who often fight an uphill battle with their double chin look, often particularly benefit from this procedure. More information can be found at http://www.RodeoDrivePlasticSurgery.com and http://www.rodeodriveplasticsurgery.com/chinrejuvenation.html and http://www.RodeoDriveLiposuction.com or by calling 310 550 6300. The Rodeo Drive Experience: Rodeo Drive Plastic Surgery is the first and only plastic surgery center at Beverly Hills' ultimate address, Rodeo Drive. Its boutique offices and the plastic surgery center are situated in a location universally known as the capitol of fashion, style, and opulence.
Lottery cash boost for school facelift
PUPILS will get the chance to give their school a face lift after cleaning up at the National Lotteries Board. Smithills School has been given £5,000 from the All Big Lottery Fund to establish a regeneration project to improve the grounds. A task force of pupils, aged between 11 and 16, has been set up to highlight areas in need of work. .
Tuesday's Health Winners & Losers
Myriad Genetics (MYGN - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) was trading higher after the company reported a fiscal second-quarter loss that beat analysts' expectations. After touching a 52-week high of $37.35, the stock was recently up $1.28, or 3.7%, to $36.33. Shares of MedImmune (MEDI - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) were rising 1.7% even after Thomas Weisel Partners downgraded the stock to market-weight from overweight, citing a lack of new drugs in the pipeline. MedImmune, which is set to report fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday, was recently up 58 cents to $34.22. Among losers, Mentor (MNT - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr), a Santa Barbara, Calif.-based maker of breast implants, posted fiscal third-quarter earnings that beat the Thomson First Call consensus, but its shares were still falling.
The new face of cosmetic surgery is less invasive
That face-lift that leaves you looking as if you're standing on the prow of a ship in a stiff breeze is so 20th century. True, more than 10.2 million cosmetic plastic surgery procedures are performed annually, a number that's increasing by about 10 percent a year, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. "For many, cosmetic plastic surgery is the new take on 'growing old gracefully,' " says Dr. Bruce Cunningham, ASPS president. But the types of procedures are changing. For the first time in many years, the numbers of face-lifts are declining, he says. Instead, there is consumer demand for minimally invasive, injectable wrinkle fillers that, in theory, combat facial aging, Cunningham says. "I see this whole beauty industry going toward skin.
More people having cosmetic surgery
Plastic surgery fans are paying out fees starting at £6,000 as they try and hold onto their youthful looks. National figures released by the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS) show that facelifts alone rose by 44 per cent in 2006 in comparison with 2005. .
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