For this client, I added color to the eyebrows; the upper eyelid has a very narrow line known as eyelash enhancement. Eyeliner can be wide or more conservative, according to the client’s preferences.
I plan to be back in Roanoke on Friday, February 24, 2012 at Medical Grade Skin Care, Inc., 4523 Brambleton Avenue SW. To make an appointment please contact Betsy McClearn at 540/774-3223.
Thanks to a recent caller who referred to this article from February 2011. It is a well-stated and apt warning for anyone considering permanent makeup, and, I believe, presents a more balanced report than the NPR story. As noted before, I welcome all questions about my materials, my methods, and my qualifications. Please read the About page on this website, which includes references to my training and to my relationship with the medical community and with highly respected, local aesthetic practitioners. I frequently consult with them in the case of skin conditions and scar management, and I have been honored by their continuing referrals.
I’ve been alerted to a recent NPR story and its FDA reference. Readers and listeners should make the distinction between tattoo inks and permanent makeup pigments–their formulas are very different; beyond that, I can’t comment on tattoo inks. As others have pointed out, the same color compounds that are used in permanent makeup pigments are the ones used in food, which we ingest in far greater quantities, and prescription drugs. They are approved for these uses, as well as in topical makeups that are applied every day. To these are added either alcohol or distilled water (and sometimes glycerin), as vehicles for the pigments.
In answer to the question of pigment and MRI safety, I am not aware of any actual cases of MRI difficulties, and I quote from my professional organization’s website (www.spcp.org):
” According to Dr. Frank Shellock of Tower Imaging in Los Angeles, CA, a top expert in MRI safety, [out of the thousands who have had permanent makeup applied], only a handful of people have reported minor problems around the eye area and no problems around the lip or brow area. … Test studies have confirmed that the ‘iron’ particles in pigment are too microscopic to react as true metal pieces but rather are more accurately compared with ‘metals’ which already exist microscopically in the body.”