Aging baby boomers, like your correspondent, may be a hot market for the latest wrinkle eradication technique. As reported by the Daily News, “vampire fillers” involve taking blood from the patient, centrifuging out the red cells, then injecting the remaining platelet-rich plasma into the wrinkled area. However, a dermatologist affiliated with Long Island College Hospital urges caution before undergoing such a procedure.
Daily News: Dr. David Avram, a dermatologist at Long Island College Hospital who also has a private practice, notes that it takes about three months for the “vampire” filler to work. (He does not offer them, but knows doctors who do.)
“There’s not a lot of data on it yet as an effective treatment, and the main gist is that more studies need to be done,” Avram said. “I would not have patients rush into having this done yet since we already have fillers that work very well and that we know are safe.”
Is there really, as noted elsewhere in the Daily News piece, an “aesthetic dermatologist” at Lenox Hill named Doris Day?



Image and the following report from 
Nabe Chatter