Lauren Sánchez’s trip to the Missal of the fiancée Jeff Bezos raises health concerns due to suspected cosmetic improvements.
Sánchez, 55, and five other women, including Popstar Katy Perry, 40 years old, are going to take off from Blue Origin Texas Spaceport on Monday at 9:30 am. on a historic female space flight to New Shepard Rocket.
The crew will only spend three minutes with zero weight, but the short stay in a low pressure environment has left doctors wonder how the Sánchez plastic surgeries could be affected and cosmetics.
Although Sánchez did not confirm it, there was a wide speculation that he had breast implants. Plastic surgeons have also told dailymail.com that there is a reason to believe that it has received botox, lip fills and possibly a facelift.
One doctor expressed some concern about Monday’s Spaceflight, more due to extreme stress during take -off than limited time in zero gravity.
Dr. Stanton Gerson, who is investigating the impact of deep space on cells, told dailymail.com: “The launch of rockets will be more concerned about the start.
“Go to about 6,000 miles / hour and this can cause shear voltage and can cause something to shift.”
The shear tendency refers to forces that cause parts of one material to slip into each other in opposite directions. In the context of plastic surgical elements, such as filling lips or breast implants during the launch of an astronaut in space, the trend of shear could occur due to the severe acceleration and vibrations they place during launch.
The launch in space alongside Sánchez will be CBS Gayle King, the political rights activist Amanda Nguyne, director Kieranne Flynn, Nasa Aisha Bowe and Popstar Katy Perry.

Sánchez, who deals with Jeff Bezos, is said to have had several cosmetic procedures that have been done in recent months, according to plastic surgeons

Blue Origin’s new spacecraft’s new spacecraft takes passengers in space for about 3 minutes before returning to Earth
Even without going into space, there have been cases where women have reported that they are experiencing strange senses in their augmented breasts while flying at high altitudes.
A 2013 study revealed that the cause of this discomfort was a “implantation gas”, which caused a phenomenon similar to decompression disease.
However, this study, however, has seen several developments to increase its safety, aesthetics, durability – which could soon be tested during Monday’s flight.
The 2013 study was conducted by Dr. John Lewin, Associate Professor of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging in Yale.
His findings were articulated in the pressure changes that caused the gas collection in the premises between the older implants and the woman’s breast tissue, enhanced by high altitude travels on commercial planes.
Modern implants, using coherent gels and stronger shells, are less likely to create or maintain such spaces because of their ability to stick better in the body and remain in place safely.
However, no study has immediately reviewed the gas phenomenon of the periphery.
While breast implants have gone a long way in terms of their safety over the last decade, procedures such as lip filling, facelifts and botox may continue to be a cause for concern.
In zero gravity, the body fluids move to the head, causing swelling of the face. This could alter the way in which Botox or Lip fills are installed or displayed.
“This is a weird thing and the truth is we have no idea what could happen,” admitted Dr. Gerson.
Dr. Timothy Katzen, a plastic surgeon of Beverly Hills, who has handled hundreds of patients during his 25 years of practice, has faced concerns about the stability of cosmetic improvements in extreme situations, such as those facing astronauts during spaceflight.
“The filling is solid and in the skin, in the soft tissue, it is not a liquid like silicone,” he explained. “I think this would make it unlikely to move.”
To clarify, Dr. Katzen refers to skin fillers, usually hyaluronic acid gels used for processes such as lips or cheeks, which have a thick, durable texture that helps them stay in place in the soft tissue.
On the contrary, liquid silicone was once used as a silicone injectable for similar cosmetic procedures, but has been largely abandoned due to its tendency to move and cause complications.
Unlike fillers, liquid silicone fluidity increases the risk of pressure under pressure, such as high GS (3-8 GS) forces experienced during a rocket launch.
Plastic surgeons are still suspected that Sánchez has received the most stable skin fillers in recent months after appearing on the head at the inauguration of President Trump in January.
Concerning what the short flight could do, Dr. Katzen added that “I wouldn’t expect that he would have much of the result.”
Cosmetic surgeon Giselle Prado-Wright, MD, MBA, believes that there is no reason to worry when it comes to plastic surgery patients who are launched in space.
“Skin fillers are designed to integrate perfectly into your natural tissue over time. Once healed, they move and behave exactly like your own soft tissue, “The Bodysculpt medical director at dailymail.com
“Astronauts in the past have not shown changes to the facial structure after the space trip and we would not expect any difference here,” he added.
Perry turned to her own rumors that she underwent plastic surgery in 2018, saying she has only received laser treatments and “took [filler] Injections under my eyes for the hollow – I would recommend for everyone who wants a solution for their black circles.
Dailymail.com has arrived in both Sánchez and Blue Origin for comments about possible health concerns surrounding Monday, but did not receive an answer.
Bending alongside Sánchez will be CBS co-iconic Gayle King, 70, civil rights activist Amanda Nguyne, 33, director Kieranne Flynn, 57, Nasa Rocket Scientist Aisha Bowe, 38, and Perry.

Sánchez and the rest of the crew received their updated spaceits this weekend

6 women are the list of passengers for Monday’s Blue Origin Spaceflight, making it the first women’s space flight from Valentina Tereshkova’s individual mission in 1963

Doctors are uncertain about what could happen to a person who had several cosmetic procedures when they start in space


Lauren Sanchez, 55, is believed to have undergone facelift as well as botox around her mouth and cheeks
Experts have explained that there are some normal changes that occur when one goes into space – and may actually be beneficial to patients with plastic surgery.
In the case of facelifts, these processes face relaxation with the gravity that comes with age.
However, in the microbasmation, less relaxation occurs. Thus, the results of a facelift can really look more intense while they are in space.
In the meantime, lack of gravity during the space flight could make breast implants slightly shift and appear more globally due to reduced downward attraction.
Normally, gravity affects the way a woman’s implants are installed after surgery.
For people who have received botox injections, shifting the fluid to the head with zero weight can alter the way Botox appears, possibly making wrinkles even less remarkable temporarily due to the natural swelling of the face in space.
Taking, the flight of many millions of dollars will only drop Sánchez and its characteristics for its famous crews for just 180 seconds before the rocket returns to Earth.