Real Face Lift

Face Lift Plastic Surgeon in New York

Call 24 Hours a Day / 7 Days a Week
Manhattan (646) 461-7258
Garden City, Long Island (516) 307-0254

Prasad Cosmetic Surgery

Nonsurgical Rejuvenation

Look like the stars of Sucker Punch with LashDip!

LashDip can give you those eyes that will literally “sucker punch” others. If you’ve seen the new action movie Sucker Punch, you know that long lashes can be very powerful and sexy. The movie make-up effect used to achieve the dramatic eyelashes on the Sucker Punch actresses  Emily Browning and Vanessa Hudgens can be achieved very similarly and long, lasting with LashDip semi-permanent mascara.

LashDip, an innovative semi-permanent mascara application that delivers lush, full, dark, long lashes that you could only dream of. LashDip is safe for your natural lashes, and is a pharmaceutical grade, hypoallergenic product (LashDip does not contain Aniline or Formaldehyde). “Dipping” your lashes with LashDip allows you to maintain long-lasting eyelashes for up to six weeks! LashDip adds volume, increases length, provides lift, curve &separation – similar to that of traditional mascara – but it won’t smudge or wash off! No more hassling with mascara or makeup remover.

Call Dr. Amiya Prasad’s offices in New York City and Garden City for your LashDip appointment today!

Emily Browning as Baby Doll in Sucker Punch

Sucker Punch's Emily Browning

Semi permanent mascara lashdip

Vanessa Hudgens as Blondie in Sucker Punch Make up

Sucker Punch's Vanessa Hudgens

Posted in Nonsurgical Rejuvenation | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Pelleve: A new procedure, with LI roots, in the war on wrinkles (Newsday)

There’s yet another weapon in the war on wrinkles.

Called Pelleve, the process uses radio-wave technology to induce heat into the skin, stimulating collagen growth to tighten skin and reduce the appearance of wrinkles.

The technology was developed by Ellman International, a medical company in Oceanside, N.Y., that got its start making equipment for dental surgery.

Pelleve was granted FDA approval as a facial wrinkle reducer in May 2009, said Tom Harper, vice president of global marketing at Ellman. The equipment was initially used to stop bleeding during surgery, said Harper, adding that the treatment is now being used in well over 200 facilities in the country. “Patients seem to feel there’s a lot of value in the product, especially around the eyes and jawline,” he said.

WHAT TO EXPECT The doctor or technician will apply a protective gel, then run the handpiece over the area being treated. Patients generally report feeling a sensation of warmth. “It goes to a point where it feels very hot,” said cosmetic surgeon Amiya Prasad, one of several Long Island doctors using the treatment. “Most people tolerate it very well,” he added. No numbing or anesthesia is required (or desired since they want you to speak up if it gets too hot).

DOES IT WORK? “Pelleve has worked out to be a good service for our patients, for the person who is not quite ready for a face-lift,” Prasad said. Likewise, Greenvale dermatologist Deborah S. Sarnoff says patients have been happy with the procedure, which she often combines with Botox and fillers. “A Pelleve treatment is administered to improve overall skin laxity,” she said, “then I inject filler to areas that may need more volume and Botox to relax the dynamic wrinkles.”

Sarnoff says that, unlike other treatments, “patients see an immediate improvement,” though many doctors suggest two or three sessions for the best results.

HOW’S IT DIFFERENT? Pelleve differs from Thermage, another procedure that uses radio frequency, in that the handpiece can be moved back and forth over the skin, which doctors say allows them to more easily target problem areas.

COST Harper says costs vary widely. In this area, treating the entire face runs $1,500 to $2,000 a session; treating a single area (like the eyes) can run $500 to $1,000.

WHO SHOULD HAVE IT? Both Prasad and Sarnoff say the ideal Pelleve patient is someone with mild to moderate wrinkling or skin laxity, or someone who had a face-lift and wants to maintain the results.

By Barbara Schuler; Newsday, Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Pelleve Skin Tightening Amiya Prasad MD

Posted in Eye Lifts, Nonsurgical Rejuvenation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment