Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Marian Rivera’s secret to younger-looking skin
MANILA, Philippines - Having a sexy body is essential to superstar Marian Rivera, now Mrs. Dingdong Dantes, but maintaining fantastic skin is an entirely different story. “Having beautiful skin is very important to me, especially now that I am fond of posting in social media and Instagram. And of course, I want Dong to fall in love with me every day,” Marian shares.
So, what’s her secret? It’s Belo Nutraceuticals Collagen Powder Drink that she takes twice a day — one in the morning, usually mixed with her coffee, and the other for dinner with her soup or juice.
”Dr. Belo keeps telling me to drink collagen,” says Marian. ”I followed her advice and after only two weeks of drinking her collagen powder drink, I already noticed that my skin felt smoother and more moisturized.”
Because of this product, she now feels and looks younger, her skin more supple and firm.
As Dr. Vicki Belo described to Marian, youthful skin is like a brand-new sofa – firm such that when you sit on it, you are pushed back up, unlike with an old sofa, where you simply sink down. Collagen is like springs that enhance the structure and firmness of the skin.
”I feel very honored to endorse such a breakthrough product that changes how we look at skin care,” Marian gushes.
Belo Nutraceuticals Collagen Powder Drink provides remarkable anti-aging benefits that start from within and further give the skin an abundance of strength, elasticity, and resilience. What makes it different from other collagen drinks is that it contains hyaluronic acid, a moisture magnet that improves skin hydration, absorbing 1,000 times its weight in water molecules.
The collagen powder has a neutral taste. One sachet a day, dissolved in your favorite hot and cold beverage, be it coffee or tea, milk or yogurt, is all you need to keep your skin hydrated and firm.
Belo Nutraceuticals Collagen Powder Drink is available at Belo Medical Group clinics, Watsons, Mercury Drugstores, and other leading online stores nationwide.
source: philstar.com
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Dr. Vicki Belo on why 20 million people trust Botox to look young
I’m obsessed with porcelain, flawless faces. I love how some actors have an ageless glow and how some newscasters’ tight skin can steal the spotlight from the headlines. I love imagining how their regimens must be like, thinking of the discipline their taut skin entails. During a one-on-one chat with renowned doctor to the stars Dr. Vicki Belo, I was determined to find out their beauty secrets. “True, a lot of actors and newscasters get Botox,” Belo reveals. Bearing that reality in mind, I instantly got hooked on getting to the bottom of Botox.
DR. VICKI BELO: It really started for therapeutic purposes. It paralyzes muscles temporarily. They were doing it for patients with cerebral palsy or blepharospasm. Jean Carruthers, an ophthalmologist, was injecting people with Botox for blepharospasm; and they kept coming back because the treatment also got rid of their wrinkles. The patients would insist on having Botox even on the side of their face where there was no spasm. She later informed her partner, Dr. Alastair Carruthers, a dermatologist, about her discovery. Together, they wrote a paper based on their patients, and they presented it in 1990 to the American Society for Dermatological Surgery of which I am a member.
So, did you immediately become a fan of the product?
At first I thought: “Are you really serious? We’ll inject people with toxin just to be able to stop their wrinkles? Isn’t that a bit much? Haven’t we gone over the line?” I didn’t use it right away. I wanted to be sure. I just kept observing and later on there were more and more papers about it. I gave myself a five-year deadline, thinking that if nothing bad was reported in five years, I would start doing it. So, finally, I started doing Botox 17 years ago, way before it was really available in the Philippines. I used to have to import it from the States.
What does Botox have over other kinds of treatments?
The public doesn’t know and they don’t really understand what it’s used for. They think laser can do what Botox does, but it can’t. They think a filler can do it, but it won’t.
When we talk about Botox, we’re talking about muscles. It doesn’t do anything much to your skin. When you talk about beauty, especially of the face, you’re dealing with four things: the epidermis, the dermis, the fat, and the muscle. Botox targets the deepest layer, which is the muscle. In fact, no other thing targets the muscle. Thermage Laser doesn’t target the muscle, fillers don’t target the muscle.
So where and when does it come in, in terms of one’s regimen?
The filler can only come after the Botox. If you have the corrugator muscles or what we call the 11 lines here (points above the eyebrows), you have to Botox first and stop the muscles from involuntarily causing that line. Then, you can follow with a filer to bring the line up.
Just putting the filler without putting the Botox isn’t going to work. That might even make it worse because you just keep squeezing and squeezing the crease with your muscles, and so the filler is squeezed out, too.
What makes a good Botox job?
You should look like yourself, except that you have fewer lines. Unless you request and tell me that you want your eyebrows a little higher, I can do it. But what I don’t want is a patient looking like Mr. Spock.
I’m very grateful to Allergan since it’s because of them that I can make my practice work really well. You can actually do a facelift with just Botox and fillers nowadays, you don’t even really have to cut anymore. The face will go on moving, your skin will go on aging. This is not a permanent solution. By doing it, you slow down looking older.
It seems like there’s Botox everywhere. What makes one different from the other?
Botox is actually a trade name. It’s not a generic name. Now that its patent has expired after 20 years, though, there’s already Botox from China and from India, and they’re very cheap. But they’re also very unpredictable and not FDA-approved. There are no studies about them. And people use them because they’re cheaper. It’s scary.
People say, “You can easily Botox this and Botox that.” But you’d better ask for the bottle to see if it’s really Allergan. That’s the only real Botox. Everything else is clostridium botulinum toxin, yes. But, it isn’t exactly the same formula as Allegran. Sometimes, they put the clostridium botulinum in, but the carrier is different, so it’s more painful; or sometimes they don’t know how to regulate it. It takes a lot of money to have that kind of research and predictability, so that’s why we always insist on using Allergan Botox, so that you’ll know you’re sure. Besides, it’s your face, and you shouldn’t experiment.
If you start on Botox, won’t you have to do it forever?
That is true. It’s not that you have to, but if you want to look rested and not problematic, then yes. The good thing is that the gaps in between get longer. If, say, you’re a Botox virgin, then you need to get your next (treatment) in three months, maybe. If you’ve had two sessions done already, it can go up to four months and five months, before you actually need a next treatment. The longest gap without the movement coming back is one year. For most people, the movement comes back after four to six months.
“Paralyzing muscles” sounds a tad too stiff and frozen. How true is this?
The negative connotations are not real. I’ve been Botoxing for the past 17 years, and I’m not “frozen.” I mean, I have expression, there’s no doubt about that, but it’s an expression that I want. It’s the expression that I want to come out.
You see, in doing this (frowns and scrunches forehead), the motions are often involuntary and the message that you project is that you’re worried or you’re not a nice person; you look sungit. And that’s not the message that you want to project. A lot of nice people end up looking worried or cranky because they do that.
The first question we ask when someone comes in is, “How much of it (your lines) do you want gone?” We can do a frozen face with no expression, with no lines at all, but I advise against that. I want patients to have expressions, but soft.
But don’t we like our facial lines to give us more character/wisdom/history?
Yeah, right! Well, it depends on what character you want to create or channel. Seriously, it’s very European to say that. They don’t care about their lines. They say, “I’ve earned those lines. They’re my lines.” In the US, they don’t want any lines. Filipinos don’t want any lines either. If you’re worried about “creating character,” do it in other ways, not with lines on your face.
For inquiries, call the Belo hotline at 819-BELO (2356) or e-mail info@belomed.com.
source: philstar.com
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Criminal case vs Belo, 2 others for botched butt procedures dismissed

MANILA, Philippines - Quezon City chief prosecutor Donald Lee has upheld the dismissal of criminal cases against cosmetic surgeon Dr. Vicky Belo and two others by a patient who claimed to have suffered infections in her buttocks after two augmentation procedures.
Apart from Belo, also exonerated from the cases of estafa/other deceits and violation of Medical Act of 1959 (illegal practice of medicine) were Dr. Francis Decanghon and Dr. Ronaldo Cayetano of the Belo Medical Group.
The cases stemmed from the complaint of trader Josefina Norcio, who claimed that she suffered severe infections in her buttocks after undergoing butt enhancements, which endangered her life and health.
In a seven-page review, Lee affirmed the June 8, 2012 resolution of 4th assistant city prosecutor Fabinda Santos, who dismissed the cases against the doctors citing lack of probable cause.
The chief fiscal agreed with the disposition that the charges of estafa/other deceits and violation of Medical Act of 1959 should be dismissed as the respondents are duly licensed physicians and that the butt infection Norcio complained of is remotely connected to the hydrogel butt augmentations done in 2002 and 2005.
"The rest of the disposition in the said resolution insofar as it dismisses the charge of estafa/other decits and violation of Medical Act 1959 against the respondent-surgeons is hereby approved and retained in toto," he said.
Lee however reversed Santos's recommendation to file in court the perjury case filed by Belo against Norcio.
"Viewed from the foregoing, the resolution of Prosecutor delos Santos is hereby modified by dismissing the charge of perjury against Josefina Norcio," the review said.
Belo charged Norcio with perjury after the latter answered "no" in the Investigation Data Form's question if she has a similar complaint filed before any other office.
In dismissing the perjury complaint, Lee noted that since the separate cases filed by Norcio are outside the operative prohibition against forum shopping, her failure to make the disclosure in the investigation data form is insignificant or of no consequence and would not cause the dismissal of her cases against Belo.
On two occasions, Norcio filed cases of estafa, reckless imprudence resulting in serious physical injuries, tax evasion and false, deceptive or misleading advertisement in connection with her botched butt augmentation surgeries.
She filed the first set of cases against the cosmetic surgeons in 2009 for their alleged false representation that the hydrogel and butt enhancement operation were perfectly safe.
These were dismissed the following year for insufficiency of evidence. Norcio sought a review at the Department of Justice which has not yet been resolved.
In 2011, Norcio filed the second set of cases, which were eventually dismissed by delos Santos and affirmed by Lee.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Al Galang on Vicki Belo: 'Well I'm just happy that she seems way more at peace these days'

PEP EXCLUSIVE. “Sila ba?"
This was the question of some guests who noticed the sweetness of Dra. Vicki Belo and Al Galang at the birthday party of Ruffa Gutierrez last June 30.
In an interview with GMA News 24 Oras, the famous beauty doctor was quick to say that her yoga instructor is just a “good friend."
The sightings, she said, can be explained because of this project called “Belofy Me," which is the first and only free cosmetic surgery simulation mobile app for iPhone and iPad in the Philippines.
Dra. Vicki added, “He’s helping with the app. Siguro kaya lagi kami natsi-tsismis kasi lagi kami magkasama developing the app."
Back to her love life, Dra. Vicki said she's setting an age requirement this time.
Smiling, she quipped, “Ayoko na ng young kasi nahihirapan talaga ako. Kung gustong mag-apply, mga 35, 45, 50, puwede…"
One thing she didn't explain: their reported sweetness.
"DON'T QUALIFY YET…" Earlier, PEP.ph (Philippine Entertainment Portal) received a video showing what was described by the sender a "sweet moment" between the beauty doctor and the yoga instructor.
The sender, who also attended Ruffa's party, requested for anonymity.
To settle the real score, we got in touch with Al via text, and informed him about the video.
His reply (published as is): “Well I'm just happy that she seems way more at peace these days :) its such a breath of fresh air not to see her in pain."
The last time we spoke to him about Dra. Vicki was sometime in February, when his name was dragged into the controversial breakup of the latter with Hayden Kho, Jr.
We asked a follow-up question: is he “partly causing that glow or happiness" of the beauty doctor?
Al answered, “obviously I can't say if it's really me that's making her bloom, but I know I've tried my best lately to help her get groove back :)"
When asked about the media’s speculation, he simply said, “I thought that was done :p"
Lastly, with regard to Dra. Vicki’s statement on the real score between her and Al, here’s what the 32-year-old (one blogger said he’s 28) hunk told PEP:
“As far as I know though, she set an age minimum for her next guy, and I definitely don't qualify yet!" -- Karen A. Pagsolingan, PEP
source: gmanetwork.com