Wrinkly, knobbly, saggy - meet the celebs going weak at the knees!
She may still have the glossy mane,
tiny waist and toned arms of a woman ten years her junior, but there was
one body part that let down Catherine Zeta-Jones when she appeared on
the red carpet this week — her saggy knees.
The 42-year-old’s knee wrinkles — or ‘kninkles’ as they have been dubbed — blighted her otherwise perfect pins, and proved that even Hollywood stars can’t avoid the dreaded crinkling, pouching and sagging of the knee area which starts when women hit 40.
‘As we age, the collagen
beneath the skin’s surface breaks down, which causes sagging — and the
force of gravity above the knees, plus the extra skin that allows us to
stretch and bend our legs, makes this area more noticeable than most,’
says Dr Dirk Kremer, cosmetic surgeon at Harley Street Aesthetics.
And staying slim won’t help when it comes to kninkles.
‘In slimmer women, the lack of fat holding up the skin above the knee means even more sagging,’ says Dr Kremer. ‘And it’s worse in yo-yo dieters, as the skin doesn’t bounce back as much as we get older, leaving skin loose.’
But, according to Dr Tracy Mountford, medical director of the Cosmetic Skin Clinic, there are some things that can help transform wrinkly knees.
‘High impact exercise targeting
your thigh muscles does have an effect, because as you tone the muscle,
the skin tightens with it,’ she says. ‘And simply body brushing and
using lashings of moisturiser will help the skin’s appearance if you
want to bare your legs. But it won’t work miracles.’
Dr Mountford also performs Thermage, a radiofrequency treatment that tightens the skin which claims to give a ‘decent improvement’ to minor knee wrinkles.
But the only real fix is to fork out for an £8,000 surgical thigh lift, where the entire skin of the thigh is pulled up — though it leaves a major knee-to-groin scar down the inner thigh.
It seems that most celebrities prefer to just grin — and bare — their problem knees, be they wrinkly, chubby, bulbous, knobbly or misshapen . . .
The 42-year-old’s knee wrinkles — or ‘kninkles’ as they have been dubbed — blighted her otherwise perfect pins, and proved that even Hollywood stars can’t avoid the dreaded crinkling, pouching and sagging of the knee area which starts when women hit 40.
‘In slimmer women, the lack of fat holding up the skin above the knee means even more sagging,’ says Dr Kremer. ‘And it’s worse in yo-yo dieters, as the skin doesn’t bounce back as much as we get older, leaving skin loose.’
But, according to Dr Tracy Mountford, medical director of the Cosmetic Skin Clinic, there are some things that can help transform wrinkly knees.
Dr Mountford also performs Thermage, a radiofrequency treatment that tightens the skin which claims to give a ‘decent improvement’ to minor knee wrinkles.
But the only real fix is to fork out for an £8,000 surgical thigh lift, where the entire skin of the thigh is pulled up — though it leaves a major knee-to-groin scar down the inner thigh.
It seems that most celebrities prefer to just grin — and bare — their problem knees, be they wrinkly, chubby, bulbous, knobbly or misshapen . . .
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