
Botox and fillings will shoot in space?
Lauren Sánchez, the fiancee of the founder of Amazon and owner of Origin de Blue, Jeff Bezos, joined the pop star Katy Perry, the coanfrerion of “CBS Mornings”, Gayle King and others in the new Shepard rocket of the space technology company for a historical space thread by all companies.
The new Shepard 31 shot through the Texas sky with the three celebrities and crew companions Amanda Nguyen, Aisha Bowe and Kerianne Flynn, who enjoyed only a few minutes in space before tourism to Earth.
While the mission is in the headlines as the first crew of women to venture in space, some have questioned the need for spending trip, not mentioning how Sánchez’s alleged cosmetic improvements could to extreme conditions.
It is speculated that Sánchez has suffered procedures to receive breast implants, botox, lipsticks and facial stretching, Althhehe has never confirmed the rumors.
Dr. Stanton Gerson, a researcher or deep space effects on human cells, expressed concern about the extreme stress of rocket launch.
“You are going to approximately 6,000 mph and that can cause cutting stress and can make something change,” said Gerson, who investigates the impact of deep space on cells, to the Daily Mail.
Cutting stress occurs when forces cause parts of a material to adapt to each other, which could be a risk of materials implanted as breast implants or lip filling.
This group is not completely unfounded.
A 2013 study conducted at Yale University found that women with breast implants sometimes experience problems while flying to large altitudes, based on the accumulation of “peri-implanted gas.”
The phenomenon occurs due to pressure changes, which can trigger a sensation of oppression or discomfort in augmented breasts. However, modern implants, made with cohesive gels and stronger shells, are less likely to be affected by those problems.
Cosmetic surgeons also expressed mixed opinions about other procedures. In zero gravity, body fluids change to the head, which could cause swelling or changes in the way in which dermal fillings or botox appear.
However, experts pointed out that dermal fillings, typically made of hyaluronic acid, are solid and stable in the skin.
The cosmetic surgeon Dr. Giselle Prado-Wright explained that the fillings are integrated into the tissue about time, suggestion that there would be no significant changes duration of the space flight letter.
Blue/AFP origin through Getty Images
“The dermal fillings are designed to integrate sewed in their natural fabric approximately time. Once cured, they move and behave like their own soft fabric,” said Prado-Wright, medical director of Bodysculpt, based in Florida, to The Daily Mail.
“Astronauts in the past Haven Townes in the facial structure after the space trip, and we would not expect any difference here.”
As space tourism continues to evolve, it raises intriguing questions about how the procedures can go in extreme conditions as the six got high in the complete makeup and designer design suits.
“The space will finally be glamorous,” Perry told Elle. “If I could take glamorous with me, I would do that. We are going to put the ‘ass’ in the astronaut.”
Sanchez told the magazine that he would hit a glue in his false eyelashes to make sure they would not fly out of duration.
The female trip and its makeup makeup routine prior to consumption caused important criticisms of actress Olivia Munn, who questioned the blue crew of female blue origin and full of stars for traveling to space in an episode of “Today With Jenna and Friends.”
When it was told that the entire crew is “in glamor”, with hair and makeup, Munn seemed stunned and joked: “What? They said out loud?”
Munn questioned how the trip would be even more scientific advances and improve society.
But perhaps we will better understand how cosmetic procedures can handle space.
“This is a curious element, and the truth is that we have no idea what could happen,” Gerson admitted.

