Quote:
Originally Posted by mars735
Thanks for the links, Slimmer. If the studies were sponsored by Johnson & Johnson (information that the linked abstract doesn't mention), then they are not credible. Vendor-sponsored studies all too often are shown to have strong bias to "prove" safety & efficacy. There have been many scandals too numerous to count, sadly, in which highly paid medical researchers--doctors-- falsified data to get the results desired by their sponsoring vendors.
Before & after photos can be doctored and often are! Dr. Perricone sells a line of skin care products and any claim he makes is probably to get you to buy the product. If the stuff works, great, but buyer beware.
I don't know a thing about LED therapy but the fact that it's now considered a medical procedure doesn't mean it's effective, though it might be. It may mean a bunch of consumers were injured because of lack of proper training by cosmeticians--just a possibility, not saying that happened.
Estheticians are trained to use LED light therapy and people even use it at home.
LED light therapy was banned because "No licensee may perform any act which affects the structure or function of living tissue of the face or body. Any such act shall be considered an invasive procedure."
There are no documented injuries from LED light therapy/photofacials.
Here's another DMAE study:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12236885
And another:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20095140
Perricone's book is about nutrition and, yes, he makes some recommendations for vitamins, supplements, and skin care products - but not just his own, products in all price points and some you can find in super markets. He's a respected, board certified dermatologist and nutritionist, as well as educator. I trust his opinion, but I would never buy his products. Stupid expensive.