/ Dr. Nicholas Nikolov

Dr. Nikolov Discusses Male Plastic Surgery

October 12, 2009

October 7, 2009

 “It’s a cultural change,” says Dr.
Nicholas Nikolov, a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon who has recorded a 30
per cent increase in male clients over the past three years. “The
perception is that people who are energetic and capable look youthful.
Patients want to look younger so that the outside matches their
enthusiasm and vigour inside.” – Dr. Nicholas Nikolov

Written by Robert Cribb

As the Botox-infused needle pierces the skin around Howard Lende’s
left eye, the resulting wince produces the furrows he has earned over
46 years.

Slowly, the needle’s clear liquid contents empty into
the Toronto real estate agent’s face in a ritual that is becoming
increasingly common among men of a certain age anxious to smooth out
the wrinkles.

“I haven’t slept in 10 years,” says Lende, a top agent specializing in downtown luxury homes.

“It’s seven days a week, full speed. The eyes tell the story.”

The pursuit of age restoration, once the exclusive realm of beauty-seeking women, is now a distinctly unisex endeavour.

Lende
sits in the bull’s eye of the male cosmetic procedure demographic:
Mid-40s, successful and in an industry where appearance – especially
youthfulness – is essential to success.

Indeed, real estate agents are among the leading group of male Botox-seekers, experts say.

“Presentation
is part and parcel of the industry,” says Lende. “If you’re happy with
your face it gives you more energy and vitality. It’s not always inside
out. It’s often outside in.”

Achieving the new 30 when you’re in your 40s comes with options.

There
are creams and toners. There is full-on cosmetic surgery. And then
there is the kind of middle ground: Clinical, non-surgical treatments
that plump, smooth, brighten and lift.

“We’re not going to do
anything drastic, just make you look like a better version of
yourself,” says Diana Phillips, the cosmetician at the DLK on Avenue
clinic where Lende sought the fountain of youth.

The process
included a “soft lift,” microdermabrasion and a photo facial – words
and phrases not previously part of the male lexicon.

The soft
lift is achieved by injecting a combination of Juvederm (which promises
to restore volume in hollowed-out cheeks and smooth out folds around
the nose and mouth) and Botox (designed to turn back the clock on frown
lines and crows feet).

It’s not cheap.

The Juvederm filler treatment rings in at $600 and up for a single treatment requiring a touch-up every six to nine months.

Botox treatments, which must be repeated every three or four months, cost $350 and up for each session.

Lende’s
youthful transformation also included intense pulse light (IPL) photo
facial treatments in which a technician zaps uneven skin tone and
broken capillaries (three to six treatments every two to four weeks;
$350 and up for each treatment) and diamond microdermabrasion to suck
up dead skin, exfoliate and brighten (three to six treatments every two
to four weeks; $150 and up each).

“Men are slowly starting to
realize there are options out there that will not drastically change
their looks; rather, just make them look and feel younger,” says Dr.
Lisa Kellett, the Toronto dermatologist who owns the DLK clinic. “The
benefit is that there is no surgery so, therefore, no downtime and more
reasonable cost than surgery.”

The before and after pictures tell the story. Weeks after his procedures, Lende does appear more rested and even youthful.

“I
thought it was a subtle but distinct transformation,” he says. “It’s
not a matter of wiping years off your face. But stress and exhaustion
do dissipate. It’s kind of like Photoshopping your face.”

Vika Goodale, owner of Yorkville’s Vikaspa, says there are days now when she sees more men than women.

“Men
absolutely love facials and pedicures,” she says. “When you have
younger and younger and smarter guys coming in looking for your job,
grooming is a big way of keeping up.”

Plastic surgery, a more
dramatic aesthetic approach that our fathers and grandfathers would
have eschewed with a dismissive wave of the hand, is also on the rise
among contemporary men.

“It’s a cultural change,” says Dr.
Nicholas Nikolov, a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon who has recorded a 30
per cent increase in male clients over the past three years. “The
perception is that people who are energetic and capable look youthful.
Patients want to look younger so that the outside matches their
enthusiasm and vigour inside.”

–   www.healthzone.ca/health

–   www.drnikolov.com