Battery powered bra purports to increase bust size
by Rebecca Litchfield
It’s the bra that keeps going, and going, and going.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a
new bra that gives women another option in breast augmentation and a new
meaning to the battery size “AA.”
The Brava Breast Enhancement and Shaping System, developed
by reconstructive surgeon Dr. Roger Khouri, is the first non-surgical
technique for increasing the bust size.
It is the only scientifically proven method besides surgery
that increases breast size, Khouri said.
The system resembles a high-tech
sports bra and weighs 1 to 2 pounds, said Brava specialist Vivian Ruben.
The battery-powered bra consists of two domes, a small computer, which
regulates and records wear pattern, and a sports bra.
Two clear plastic domes linked
to a rechargeable suction device are placed over the breasts, causing
a tight seal, she said. This creates a vacuum, which stretches the breast
and then causes the cells to respond by stretching and growing, slowly
increasing in size.
The bra, if worn for 10 hours a day for 10 weeks, can grow enough
extra breast tissue to increase one cup size on average, Ruben said. Missing
days can cause setbacks in growth and is not recommended.
If, at any point, a desired
change has been made and the user wishes to stop the treatment before
the ten-week period is up, the breasts will return to a size slightly
above what the original size was, but the enhancement will be minimal.
The system must be worn for a minimum of ten weeks to achieve the desired
change, Ruben said.
The bra was developed by Delaware Company Brava LLC,
which has a staff of business and medical professionals including plastic
and reconstructive surgeons and a medical scientific advisory board of
internationally acclaimed physicians and surgeons, said Brava Specialist
Anna Marie Teredor.
A board of leading plastic surgeons and tissue engineers
are skeptical of the effectiveness of this new product, Teredor said.
The board members, who have worked to develop this so-called “suction
bra” for more than a decade, are conducting clinical trials to demonstrate
its legitimacy. Some 200 women have tried the bra in Miami, San Francisco,
and Washington D.C.
College-educated women account for 70 percent of the
bra’s users. They are more inclined to choose the natural way to increase
breast size, Khouri said. They see that there are no potential problems
with the system, unlike surgery, and realize that they must put forth
the commitment to get what they want.
The only side effect detected is dermatitis,
an itchy skin condition that results from contact with a product that
may irritate some people’s skin, Teredor said. The bra has been tested
and is not known to cause breast cancer or stretch marks, but it is not
recommended for women who are pregnant or lactating, who have a history
of breast cancer, or are under the age of 18.
But a woman’s self-esteem could
be at risk as well.
The invention is really just
another attempt to point out women’s shortcomings or problem areas, said
Madeline Boscoe, an executive director of the Canadian
Women’s Health Network. Women should not feel compelled to use the suction
device in order to feel good about their bodies.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
has reviewed the bra and has given approval of its sale, Teredor said.
The bra has been featured in “Elle” and “Time” magazines and is now available
to purchase for $995.
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