We solve the problem that even the best personal trainers can't: attacking exercise-resistant
fat. First, even athletes and body builders have areas that won't respond to exercise and diet, due to the nature of adrenergic receptors on the surface of fat cells in abdomen or thigh/butt area. We remove excess fat cells which have accumulated over time despite exercise, then we prevent fat reaccumulation by converting exercise-resistant fat metabolism into exercise-responsive fat metabolism (with our transdermal treatment creams). The results in fit yet locally-fat men are dramatic.
Second, we have a clientelle of body builders who want to gain the competitive edge. For men, we're talking about increasing ab definition. For women, it's smaller, higher butts. (We've attending body building competitions and the main criticism that judges have about women competitors is that they look great from the front, but from behind, their butts are too large.
We routinely solve these problems for our professional patients, by sculpting excess fat around ab
muscles, shrinking and tightening butt skin. Every one of our thigh/butt patients -athlete- or not,
achieves a smaller, tighter, lifted butt.
In addition, we're the only exercise-friendly cosmetic surgery intervention. Not only is there no downtime with our procedures, but we get patients back to the gym the same day and actively promote exercise as part of both the short term treatment and long term maintenance. We create a positive-feedback loop about exercising. People whose workout results have plateaued see a dramatic improvement in sculpting by continuing the identical exercise program AND simultaneously using our treatment creams. This is not only because they are achieving skin tightening, but also because the acceleration of fat breakdown and fat burning over and above what they had previously been achieving, kicks them off of their plateau and increased toning is visibly apparent within weeks. They see results from exercise, so are happy to continue. This applies not only to athletes, but to the average Joe (or Joan), who usually drops out of an exercise program within 3-4 months of commencing, because of the absence of VISIBLE positive feedback.
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