Question:
Has anyone post-op used something like Bloussaint to increase their breast size?

I am hoping to have surgery in the future, and I am currently a DD. Even when I was 100 pounds lighter I was a D, so I'm not incredibly worried about my breasts shrinking, but they are genetically saggy (they almost point straight down and I'm only 20!) so I'm afraid this will make it worse. So my questions is about the Bloussaint product advertised on TV... anyone ever use it? Know someone who did? Does it actually work?    — [Anonymous] (posted on October 23, 2001)


October 23, 2001
My opinion is that if it worked, who would get breast implants? I'm assuming it's a pill in which case I know similar companies have been sued because they don't work. Best of Luck.
   — [Anonymous]

October 23, 2001
If this were legit, why are people still getting implants.... and why is it being sold so cheaply...through magazine ads and on tv????? It's just someone making money by taking advantage of the feelings of inadequacy that too many women have when it comes to their bodies.
   — [Anonymous]

October 23, 2001
HAH! No it definitely doesn't work, I always order that crap and then raise hell when it doesn't work, and get all my $$ back including S+H, as well as demnading a letter from someone at the company explaing it etc. then I report it to the Better Business Bureau... But what does work are those suction cup thingies that you can wear at night and they basically suck your breasts into a better shape and usually increase their size by a cup or so. They are absolutely brilliant, in fact there was an article in Newsweek or Time, I can't remember which a couple of months ago about them. Check it out!
   — [Anonymous]

October 23, 2001
I thought the previous post might be a joke, so I looked it up, and it isn't. It's called the Brava Breast Enhancement and Shaping System, it's been passed on by the FDA, and it requires the wearing of a sports-bra type device for ten hours a day for ten weeks. It requires periodic visits to a doctor, and its cost, including doctors' visits, is supposed to be about $2,500.
   — [Anonymous]

October 23, 2001
Probably works about as well as all the diet aids sold on tv. They made all of us thin, right?? BTW, the suction cup things are for real, and FDA approved (which means they are approved for safety, not necc. efficacy), but you have to be hooked up to a machine 10 hours a day. Every day, for months. Its the same principle as a hickey, and the skin is raised up, and after many months stays that way. DOnt know if it would work as well on saggy skin, though...
   — M. A. B.




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