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Would You Vampirize Yourself?
Would You Vampirize Yourself? No celebrity endorsement implied.

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7 Comments

hmm. strange but kinda cool.

nicklover on Mon, 11/02/2009 - 4:31pm

Vampires? I'm in Eye-wink

ChanelAddict on Mon, 11/02/2009 - 10:08pm

I've heard that Chinese court ladies used to make blood-jelly face masks back in ancient times...but the idea still freaks me out.

Greentie on Mon, 11/02/2009 - 10:27pm

There was a report on this in Australia, a TV show paid some lady to try this out, and it did stuff all.
Like anything involving needles, I wouldn't do it unless I educated myself on it a bit first.

Autumns_Elegy on Tue, 11/03/2009 - 4:51am

If it worked I probably would, I don't know ask me in 10 or 15 years from now and I would probably say hell yeah! It is kind of weird though!

Pampire on Tue, 11/03/2009 - 11:18am

Listen, Im in my very early 30's, and I just saw TWILIGHT for the 1st and damn right I would vampirize myself if Edward asked me!

diy on Sat, 11/07/2009 - 10:23pm

OK, everybody knows that Twilight is not real right? It's pretend!!

Anonymous on Sun, 11/15/2009 - 1:41pm

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BellaSugar Says:

 

Maybe Dracula had it at least a little bit right: apparently blood really can keep you young, but only if it's your own.

In the UK, the hottest new antiaging procedure is "S3" or Stimulated Self Serum skin therapy, which is a pretty alliterative euphemism for injecting your own blood into your face. Well, not your blood, exactly, but the clear serum that's left over once your red blood cells and platelets have been removed. The doctor draws blood from you, separates it, mixes your serum with amino acids and other vitamins, and then injects the slurry right back into your face. Apparently, a similar procedure has long been used to help regrow gum tissue in those with receding gum lines, so doctors figured it would work to regenerate skin cells, too.

This sounds like it could work, although it doesn't seem that different from mesotherapy or injectables to me. Maybe it's intended for people who want a slightly more "natural" outpatient procedure, though. What do you think?  Would you try this as opposed to Botox or Restylane, or is it just another cosmetic procedure with a slightly vampiric twist?


cool

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