Don't jump on me, I don't do it. I was just wondering if anyone has while pregnant. I can't find a lot of info on it because there hasn't been any studies regarding it's safety in use while pregnant. As far as I know it doesn't get into your blood stream, and just stays in the muscle that it is injected into. There has to be someone on this board who has either done it or asked their dr about it, I would think. #firstworldproblems
Re: Botox?
I mean "needs" as "have a use for" I guess. I agree with what you are saying, and I trust that medical professionals know 100% more than I do on all of these subjects. I do follow doctors orders and if he tells me something is safe I'm going to believe that over a Facebook meme about mercury in flu shots. They are all only comparable because I'm just an average layperson who knows very little about the contents of vaccines and chemicals in my foods and the length of studies done on pregnant women who take the same epilepsy medication that I do. They are comparable because not one of them is 100% safe, just almost or safe enough. Sometimes Botox is used for non cosmetic purposes, you don't think it's treated as potentially harmful and also weighed against the risks to the pregnancy/mother/fetus when prescribed? It's not like I'm saying, "Boo hoo, I need my Botox to feel pretty again!" I'm just starting a conversation about something I suddenly became curious about.
Luckily I had some right before I got pregnant! Plus with all the extra fluid and blood gain, I have not needed it.
This may also stem from my very anti cosmetic surgery/putting chemicals in my body stance. So...sorry if I offend anyone?
Baby Girl Born: April 2014
If you ask me what I came to do in this world, I, an artist, I will answer you:
This. Law school gave me serious forehead wrinkles. I started getting a few injections in my forehead when I was 25!!!!
TOTALLY. Even those "thread lifts" that're supposed to be less invasive and more natural looking... To me, anyone that's had one looks like they're trying to look like a cat, or that they're sitting permanently in front of a high speed wind machine cause their face is all flat and stretched out. There's a lady that works at my local Sams Club as the receipt checker on the way out, and it's obvious she's had one by the flat, wide, perma-duckface she's got. *shudders*
And FTR I'm 35 and would never dream of injecting that botulism in my face. I don't want to have the same expressionless look for every emotion, like the Kardashians' mother. Then again, I guess my family is in the "good skin" camp; what with my 82 year old grandmother looking like she's still in her late 60s and all.