Demi Moore’s bizarre beauty secret is a bloodsucking marvel

Posted on Wednesday, April 02, 2008 4:04 PM PT

By Dr. Billy Goldberg and Mark Leyner

Dr. Billy Goldberg:
There is no better impetus for a Body Odd blog than Demi Moore making a public declaration that she uses leeches to keep herself looking fresh and feeling healthy. Now, I can’t agree with Demi’s personal use of leeches (although she does look pretty fantastic), but the truth is, these little creatures are medical marvels.

In a throwback to the days of the medieval barber, today’s doctors use leeches, as well as maggots, with great success. Surgeons, for instance, use these creepy crawlers to remove blood from the site of skin grafts or reattached parts and to relieve congestion in the blood vessels.

The leeches used for medical purposes are a European variety called Hirudo Medicinalis and are raised on special leech farms. The Hirudo leech works some additional magic by secreting a chemical in its saliva that acts as an anti-coagulant to prevent blood clotting.



Oh, by the way, the bite of a leech is painless due to its own anesthetic.

If you want to read other intriguing details about medical leeches, check out John Colapinto’s 2005 New Yorker article, “Bloodsuckers.” You can learn that “Leeches are found in virtually every kind of habitat — including a species in the Sahara that resides in the noses of camels. There’s another that resides in the anuses of hippopotamuses, a cave-dwelling leech in New Guinea that sucks on the blood of bats; and one that attacks the armpits of turtles.”

Leeches aren’t the only bugs on the medical scene. In the ER, it’s not uncommon for a homeless patient to come in with a leg infection covered in maggots. After we brush away the “bugs” (maggots are actually flies at a larval stage), the wounds are surprisingly clean.

Vote: Would you be willing to slap on a leech for health and beauty benefits?

Maggots eat away the dead tissue and leave the healthy stuff behind. Not a very appetizing solution, but it works. Doctors have used these little creatures as a therapy for cleaning stubborn wounds. Sterile maggots of the green bottle fly, Lucilia sericata, are used for a procedure called “maggot debridement therapy.” The maggots (about five to 10) are placed on each square centimeter of a wound. The wound is then covered with a breathable protective dressing and the maggots are left for about two to three days to chow down on the infected tissue. It is believed that they also secrete substances that kill bacteria and promote wound healing.

Leyner — Surprise! Surprise! — has enormous affection for insects. One might even say a "morbid fascination."

Mark Leyner:
I’m elated at the resurgent use of bugs such as maggots and leeches in medicine. But I take exception to the doctor’s characterization of my fascination as “morbid.”  Yes, I have enormous affection for insects. I identify very strongly with insects. But I wouldn’t call any of this morbid. It's just that I'd much rather study the pulsed emission of scalding chemicals from a bombardier beetle than sit and watch the NCAA Final Four.

Unfortunately, we live in a culture that maintains a distinctly anti-insect bias. This is a prejudice that I’ve fought against all my life.

Once, in the third grade, the teacher asked us what we thought were the worst problems in the country. There were shouts from every corner of the room: “Corporate greed!  Racism!  Anti-Semitism!  Pollution!”  I was called last. “Entomophobia – fear of insects,” I said meekly, my voice barely audible amid the jeers of my classmates.

I’m not naïve about bugs, or even touchy-feely … but I’m always respectful. Here’s my big problem with this culture. We care so much about downer cows and seal pups and rabbits used in cosmetic research, but few people realize how many bugs have sacrificed themselves for the good of mankind. In ancient India the mandibles of soldier ants were used as surgical clips in bowel surgery. They were the first sutures! Australian aborigines use the bush cockroach as a local anesthetic. Promising cancer drugs have been isolated from the wings of Asian sulphur butterflies and from the legs of Taiwanese stag beetles.

And what about food?  I’m not talking about the 'Fear Factor' gross-out variety, but real top chef cuisine. People chow down on insects all over the world. In Australia, they eat witchetty grubs. In China, silkworm pupae and scorpions. In Indonesia, stink bugs and dragonflies. In Mexico, grasshoppers. In Cambodia, tarantulas. Termites in Uganda.  Palm grubs in Peru. And mopane caterpillars in Botswana. 

A medical warning here:  Entomophagy can pose risks. People who are allergic to shrimp or shellfish shouldn’t eat insects.
 
All I’m saying is, let’s not be insect-haters. Do you know what flashes in an insect’s mind (yes, his MIND) the instant before he’s crushed by a rolled up copy of O magazine or smushed under the trampoline-heel of your Air Nike?  Probably his Mom. Think about it. 

Comments

Yaaaayyy!!!  I am so happy to read this!  I have always wondered why the medical community seemed to have turned it's back on common sense things like leeches.  And thanks for that last bit, Mr. Leyner.  Everyone should be respectful of all living things, not just the cute and cuddly varieties.  
How is the leeches helping Demi Moore? What is it supposed to do? I understand it's benefits for medical, but why would you even want to do this for beauty? Sounds like she's really trying to hold onto her youth, and that's just impossible.
thanks for listening.
Demi Moore's beauty "secret" is cosmetic surgery, not leeches!  How ridiculous.  Leeches won't help you look like her, but her plastic surgeon might.
Basically for health reasons would be the reason for my use of leeches or maggots.  Check out an older book "Honey Mud & Maggots".  It tells of old time remedies for a variety of conditions, especially in poorer areas or third world countries.  Scar tissues are less noticable.  Rather than put chemicals into my body (pharmaceuticals), I'd rather try a more nature-based approach.  That's the way it was done, way back when.  Also, considering the resistance rates to drugs, why not go back to 'the old ways'?
I'm wondering if this works for the MRSA bug?
This was a fun article.  It didn't really go into too much depth on the subject, but it hit enough highlights to hopefully interest people into looking into it some more.  

I agree with much of Mr. Leyner's comments at the end, even if most people (myself included) don't hold such a strong connection to the insect world.  And I too would take exception to the characterization of his fascination with insects as "morbid."  It's a disappointing statement which serves more to color the readers' opinions than to inform them.

I would advise Mr. Leyner, however, to keep in mind the culture he's addressing when building his argument.  My guess is the last paragraph will turn off a large portion of the audience who may have found the rest of your remarks sound and compelling.  Not many people are ready to consider the idea of an insect having a mind, or to be referred as anything but "it."  (I proffer this advise with my best intentions - I think it's important people who challenge our biases make the strongest arguments possible, and it is in that spirit I make my remark).

I'm happy there are people like Mr. Leyner who don't accept the usual biases as a matter of course.  I'm also thrilled to know our medical community is also willing to get past them and explore alternatives which may lead to better patient care.

Again: this was a fun article.
If the maggots work to get rid of bloody marks (post-surgical), I wonder if they would work for rosacea? My face is way too red, and there are no drugs that work for it.
That was just for her husband's show Pop Fiction.  She was making that up.  (Obviously, she has had a TON of plastic surgery.)
I don't think Demi Moore looks fantastic.  Have you seen flawless?  You can only hide age with cosmetics and surgery for so long and it looks ridiculous at any age.  It's stupid, delusional, and maladjusted to keep trying to preserve youth.  It's not right.  People need to wake up.  She doesn't look young.  She looks like an older person who has had work done....period.
Okay, that is a rather "remembering the hits and forgetting the misses" kind of thinking.
It would be rather difficult to go back to the "old ways", what with the knowledge we have gained about the human body since then. I must also mention that not all remedies from the old days are a good idea. There were many practices that should never be used again. (for example, blood-letting as a way to balance the four Humours, or children's soothing syrup which contained ingredients you would never think of using on a child today) I much rather trust today's medicine.

I trust more modern
While there are actual medical benefits and reasons to use leeches and maggots, I find it distressing that celeberties fall for they shysters that peddle them as some sort of beauty enhancement...  Sadly Demi's long lasting beauty has nothing to do with leeches, but probably many other factors like diet, exercise, genetics, etc...  SOme poor schmuck is going to buy into the leeches though and lose nothing but time and money (and some blood I suppose) and wonder what went wrong.

I sincerely wish there was a way to put a disclaimer on anything a celebrity says:  "This person is being taken to the cleaner, please do some actual research before following their harebrained ideas!"
I find this similar to a celebrity craze a few years ago (and probably still now) of bee stings.  They are supposed to help your immune system, I guess.
I think it is wonderful that Mark Leyner has a respect for insects!! I am always telling people to learn to co-exist.  People have been murdering bees for years, now they are disappearing and everybody's in a tizzy.  There is a natural order to things whether you are religious or not, liberal or republican, etc, etc, everybody needs to stop being so extreme and learn how to reason.
Glad to see leeches are back for use in a medically approved way. My ancestors in England used them professionally centuries ago.
Surgery first, then the leeches to make the scar disappear. Is that it?
Heck, if I had lots of money, I'd get a nutritionist, a trainer; I'd visit the spa; get a relaxing vacation, go to some mountain or whatever to meditate; make myself beautiful; not stress about the government taking the money I've saved.
Maybe not all old remedy's are the best, but look at what the pharmacutical companys are doing to us and we let them! I am appalled at most of the perscription adds when they list the "side affects", are they really worth putting our bodies through. I think it is time to look at the more natural remedies instead of putting all the chemicals into our bodies.
This is a fantastic way to lower your ferritin level if it is high. Ferritin is stored iron. Iron is very oxidative. Too much oxidation can cause premature aging... I can totally buy this one.

Even better is to just donate blood to your local blood bank!
Are you kidding?  She looks fantastic! How do you look or are going to look at her age? I tell ya, I wish I looked that horrible.  Why be haters?
Sir,
There is certainly no evidence to support your fanciful notion that insects brains are wired for anything other than things like: the urge to eat, run from predators and to reproduce. I’m not suggesting that insects are simply pests or have no importance in the circle of life, but to say, “Do you know what flashes in an insect’s mind (yes, his MIND) the instant before he’s crushed…Probably his Mom”, is quite misleading indeed.  Assigning complex human emotions to insects doesn’t help your credibility or cause.
P.S. Please forgive any grammar or spelling mistakes, as English is my second language.  
I never read anything  pertaining to the beauty secret of the leeches for Demi Moore at all in this article. What's the beauty secret?
For rosacea, try self-tanner for faces.  I had it and went to two dermatologists who couldn't get rid of it.  I started using a self tanner to hide it, since foundation make up irritated it more.  I used very light self tanner every day instead of moisturizer and foundation.  Once it cleared up, I switched to Mary Kay moisturizer and foundation.  I can't hurt to try!
So I was sucked in by the sensationalism of the title of this story and never given an answer.  What DOES Demi Moore actually use the leeches for?
I agree with all who said that Demi's beauty (however illusionary) is a result of makeup, and plastic surgery. The only health benefit of "bleeding" via leeches or whatever is that it may rid the body of excess iron. Too much iron in a body has been linked to heart attacks. But you don't need to do anything as barbaric as use leeches, you can donate bloood once a year and this should do the trick. And for us pre-menepausal women, don't even worry about it, we loose enough blood once a month to suffice.  
My husband is a modern day ICU physician and I had no idea before this article, but these little bugs - leeches and maggots both, are  a part of the arsenal they use in the battle of healing every day.  Who knew?!
Hey Cheryl,
I was dying to know how Demi keeps so young looking and ended up finding out it WASN'T plastic surgery!

Seeing as you're allergic to shellfish, you might give up all hopes of eating grasshoppers, grubs and chocolate covered ants!  And you thought that leeches were just for fishing.

Dave
Hmm, interesting, but personally, I have a deeper affection for spiders, than bugs.  As for those people who eat insects, they make a good meal for the poor, in those countries.   Is it any different, from Leyner's view, to eat a grasshopper, than to eat steak?
If a spider would eat a grasshopper, then why shouldn't I?

i think Demi looks great and I dont think its from surgery and if leeches are whats helping then more power to her!! Other women just get jealous and wish they look that great
Why not just help other Americans by giving her blood to the Red Cross?  
I believe you are forgetting how many people died because of too much "leeching". It's true that the anticoagulant from leeches can help in surgeries, but they are parasites, and shouldn't be used too liberally.
Demi Moore is an idiot and a liar.  Her looks are attributable to winning the genetic lotto (and lots of plastic surgery).  Bleeding, via leech or any other method, would only help her if she was Hyperchromatic (produced too many red blood cells).

Gina - Maggots wouldn't help your Rosacia.  Neither would leeches (you know, the ones which actually suck blood?) because Rosacia is an inflammatory problem, not a blood-pooling problem.

A partial list of some "natural, old-time remedies" which were widely used in the "good old days, when everyone ate twigs and rubbed themselves in mud and lived to be 312"... snort:

Lead-based cosmetics and "beauty creams"
Laudanum (pure opium dissolved in lab alcohol)
Mercury enemas
Tincture of Mercury "health tonics"
Tincture of Arsenic "health tonics"
Arsenic-based "beauty creams"
Bleeding, "leeching" or "cupping" for absolutely everything

Leeches, maggots, honey, sugar, etc. have a place in modern medicine, and not infrequently can be used to solve persistent problems, but don't for one second buy the complete nonsense that everyone was healthier and lived longer in the "good old days" before modern medicine.

They didn't.  Period.  And they frequently died young, horribly, and in agony from something which is now completely treatable or preventable.
After acknowledgeing the above comments, I can't help offering my own testimonial.  In WWII my father sustained serious injuries from a motorcycle accident while carrying a message on a private governmant road. .....On arrival at the ER my mother was first told that Dad would die.  He refused to do so.  Then Mom was told Dad would lose both his legs.  Again, he refused. He waas in Veterans's Hospitals for three years with twenty-nine surgeries. The recurrent gangreen and other infections were managed with maggot therapy.  The hospital had its own sterile lab where it grew sterile maggots.  Three times a wweek Dad's wounds were cleaned and fresh maggots placed in them...Botton-line: Dad kept both his legs and eventually walked again and had a good life.  God made all things great and small and I thank Him for the maggot....It's good to see younger generations come to appreciate (and evaluate) the early good things nature provides.  
Hello.  I for one, am SICK of hearing about Demi Moore's looks.  She has more money and lives a livestyle that most American women can only dream of.  She does not look the way she does because she follows the beauty regime of an American mother dealing with children, money, drugs, guns, and absent fathers.  STOP STOP STOP talking about her looks.  She looks the way she does because she has the money to buy her looks.  If she used her money to help the homeless or hungry, then you'd have something worth writing about.  What's her claim to fame?  She married Bruce Willis and gave her kids goofy names.  By the way, she has ugly legs.  
Demi uses leaches?  This is one time I wish  I were a leach...
Once again people forget (or perhaps Demi's forgotten) beauty is only skin deep. What's everlasting is wisdom, knowledge, and experience.  That's far more attractive and worthwhile in the end.
even though this had very little to do with demi moore, it was a great article. Good to see the alternatives to drugs. I think it is great that we can use insects, and bugs for good. I personally love bugs. I was the girl that chased everyone around with a worm dangling in my hand. :)
Demi Moore's beauty secret is plastic surgery plain and simple. No Iam not a hater and I could care less what someone wants to do with their face or body. But to insult the public's intelligence by saying -oh this is all natural or I just have good genes please, you don't
genetically grow silicone breast implants or suddenly by good genes those brow lines you had a decade ago are now non- existent. Why lie?
Excellent article... Between medicinal honey and our wonderful friends the insects, there is so much healing that can be done that has essentially no negative effects, unlike drugs. May we show more appreciation and respect for what was put on this earth to help us, and become the true caretakers we are supposed to be, and they will return the favor...
What else can bugs do?
Just as intriguing as the article were all the comments...I agree w/ all who said Demi's "youthful appearance" is from plastic surgery. No, I'm not a "hater". There are many GORGEOUS actresses I love (such as Angolina Jolie!) I just don't happen to believe that Demi is attractive. And not looking her age YET is because of surgery, and surgery only!
   As for using leeches or any other insect to help heal myself...I suppose I would have to be in that situation to really decide what I would do.
I am not knocking today's medical advancement but dont forget that this medications give outrageuos side effects. I remember a friend telling me his wife went to the doctor for one thing and came out of that just to start nursing HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE.

I believe it is not just the old medical approaches that was great but those people lived a natural life. They eat fresh food not processed, they exercised (going to the stream, farming, farming itself etc) not drive around in SUVs, the children played outside (running and climbing) not sit in front of TV or playing video games.
I'm kind of sad right now. A friend and I found a turtle with quite a chunk out of its shell and flesh underneath. It was swarming with maggots. We're not talking little rice-sized ones either! We made an hour long operation of removing them as the turtle appeared to be extremely uncomfortable. They kept crawling through muscle tissue and coming back out like they were looking for something. Anyways, we turned it loose after a few days and now I'm wondering if maybe we did the poor thing a disservice, although flies smell rot and I imagine it will be reinfested in no time.
Why do all of you people hate Demi Moore beacuase she looks good for her age? And you assume that she has had plastic surgery.... It is quite possible that she has good genes and ages well.... I am a year younger than her and look like I am in my early 30's according to everyone I know, including my dermatologist. I don't do anything except use good products, stay out of the sun, and take care of myself. Give her a break. You don't know her or what she does to stay young looking. Sounds like lots of you are jealous.
I think the leeches are for reducing scarring and clotting. Sheesh, chill out people. Good for her, whether you like her or not, it seems people are just exploding for no reason. Some people do age well. My mother is 55 and barely has wrinkles and no grey hairs.
You are right, I am 44 and people think i am 34-36. I take care of myself, and i have a friend who has tons of lines on her face (same age) so its about tons of exercise, water, and good sun protection. Bottome line and no drugs, alcohol. So don't be jealous of anyone who does not look their age, do something about your self. Take your inventory.
So about 6 months ago, I had to have reconstructive surgery on my thigh.  I had a free tram skin flap put onto my thigh from my stomach tissue.  There was a chance that my flap would not take and my body would reject it.  My surgeon started seeing signs of rejected and prescribed the use of leeches.  I had leech therapy for about 2 weeks and it cleared up most of the conjestion in my thigh.  Now, my flap is really healthy and it is all thanks to having leech therapy.  It is gross, I must say, but well worth it!  
Personally, I think Demi looks like a mid 40'ish age woman. She is not ugly nor is She beautiful. I believe diet, exercise, and good health habits is the best therapy for anyone.
Blood sucking leeches help Demi with her "beauty"????
I say cosmetic surgery helps her.  I mean come on
Leeches have a place in science and medicine but to use someone like a mother of three that looks like her (Demi)-it's obvious how much surgery she has had. If you's used someone more "normal looking and less "Made-up" I would have given your article more creedence. Perhaps she uses leeches because she is one(going from her ex-husband bruce willis to a new more modern much younger man constitutes a leech in my book.
Blood sucking leeches help Demi with her "beauty"????
I say cosmetic surgery helps her.  I mean come on
Leeches have a place in science and medicine but to use someone like a mother of three that looks like her (Demi)-it's obvious how much surgery she has had. If you'd used someone more "normal" looking and less "Made-up" I would have given your article more creedence. Perhaps she uses leeches because she is one(going from her ex-husband Bruce willis to a new more modern much younger man constitutes a leech in my book.
In response to Susan from Sandy Springs.
I don't assume she has had plastic sugery, I know it. Not every one has "good genes" and the rest of us have to work for a living.  We don't own a house that we only keep our "dolls " in. She may use leeches for publicity but she has been under the knife more than once. The younger version of a husband for this year Austin K. must also use leeches to stay as young looking as Demi's daughters.
Reply to Michelle in Cumberland, MD - Turtles are extremely hardy creatures with very slow metabolisms, which enable them to survive things other creatures might not.  While the turtle you found was no doubt uncomfortably itchy from all the maggots, removing them probably did no harm.  If there is still dead tissue, they will be back.  Maggots will eat the dead tissue but leave the healthy tissue alone. You should be commended for trying and having the good sense to release the turtle back into the wild. It will probably recover and be fine.


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Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

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