NEW YORK, May 23, 2007

New Treatments Battle Cellulite Bumps

Forget The Creams, These Procedures Can Reduce The Cottage Cheese Look

  • Play CBS Video Video Combating Cellulite

    Susan Koeppen and Julie Chen take a look at innovative cellulite treatments that can help take the curdle out of your cottage cheese thighs.

  • Video Say Goodbye To Cellulite

    A treatment called Accent Therapy promises to reduce cellulite without liposuction. Dr. Sean Keniff reports on the new system, which recently received FDA approval.

  • Abby Stokes has decided to get a combination of treatments to help reduce her cellulite.

    Abby Stokes has decided to get a combination of treatments to help reduce her cellulite.  (CBS/The Early Show)

  • The Early Show ConsumerWatch

    Be informed! Our correspondents keep you posted on scams, faulty prodcuts, dangers, and more. Also -- on where to find the best deals!

  • Section Susan Koeppen

    The Early Show's consumer correspondent shares her expertise.

  • News Tools Contact Susan

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(CBS)  Whether you're plus-size, petite, a couch potato or an athlete, most women have lumps and bumps called cellulite.

Abby Stokes says cellulite has been her enemy for more than 20 years. She has tried exercise and diet, but it never works. Experts say don't waste your money on creams that claim they can reduce or get rid of cellulite. They can't penetrate the skin deep enough to make a real difference.

Stokes turned to some of the most popular treatments on the market that claim to take the curdle out of that cottage cheese.

"The reason why women have cellulite is that they have little boxes of fat that get hard over time under the surface of the skin, and when the boxes get hard, the fat pooches out," Dr. Jame Heskett of Wellpath Medical Spa told The Early Show correspondent Susan Koeppen.

A spa treatment called endermologie combats costs about $100 a session and uses a suction device to loosen up fat, and tighten the skin.

"It's very much like a massage except they're not hands; it's sort of a rolling sensation and a slight pulling sensation, it's very relaxing as far as I'm concerned," Stokes said.

Endermologie (www.endermologie1.com) requires more than a dozen sessions — plus monthly maintenance. Stokes saw results but wanted more. Now she's added carboxy-therapy where a doctor injects carbon dioxide into her cellulite.

"When it goes into the cellulite layer, it physically breaks up those boxes that hold the fat," Heskett said,

Carboxy-therapy (www.thewellpath.com) can cause temporary bruising but it offers quick results. The patient needs several sessions at a $150 a pop — plus monthly follow-ups. Stokes says the combination of treatments was worth it. Her thighs are smoother than they used to be.

"I feel more confident," Stokes said. "I feel like I'm taking care of myself, and it makes me happier with what I look like."

But a new device called the Accent (www.skinandlasers.com) was just approved by the FDA and may be the most promising in the fight against cellulite.

"What it does is it delivers a very deep heat, and that tightens the bands of collagen that are deeper in the skin, and that tightens the skin that overlies the cellulite," dermatologist Dr. David Goldberg said.

In a recent study, 90 percent of women who had the treatment saw an improvement. One of them was Roseann Catalano.

"This actually doesn't feel like much of anything, just a little bit of warmth in the area, you can kind of feel it rolling over your skin," she said.

The accent requires just six sessions but they are expensive at $750 a treatment. While the results are long-lasting, they are not permanent.

"Although we can treat cellulite, to suggest that we can cure it forever, not going to happen," Goldberg said.

If you opt for one of these treatments, make sure you do a lot of research and pick the doctor carefully. Make sure your doctor is certified in the procedure, especially for invasive treatments. In the meantime, women everywhere can take comfort in knowing even the most beautiful women in the world are not so beautiful everywhere.

"Oh, that's Cindy Crawford!" Stokes said looking at a tabloid. "It makes me feel immensely better!"

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Add a Comment
by jimfinster May 23, 2007 7:59 PM EDT
aardbear:

Dude, you need some lithium right now.


Reply to this comment
by meg072-2009 May 23, 2007 7:57 PM EDT
I really think that this is rediculous. Especially how they reported this "health" article. Julie and Susan talked about cellulite as if it is forbidden and repulsive. Their responses disgusted me even more than the prices and extremes are going through to get rid of something that they can't. One day they talk about how America is extreme with eating disorders and too skinny of people (which i DO agree with), and today they talk how they would dress in long dresses in the dark if they ever had cellulite. Hmm.
Reply to this comment
by pensacola8-2009 May 23, 2007 6:56 PM EDT
You can make the lumps go away...you can make the wrinkles go away...you can make the pain go away...but no one will accept you unconditionally, when you cannot accept yourself that way. Pop Culture...making low esteem easier to market than cigarettes!!!
Reply to this comment
by tm_bailey May 23, 2007 6:06 PM EDT
You've GOT to be kidding me?!
What ever happened to be proud of who you are. Now is it, be proud of who you can be with a little surgery here and a boob job??
Reply to this comment
by oleander8 May 23, 2007 3:55 PM EDT
Oh for Gawdsake!!
Reply to this comment

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