- Repeatedly pursing your lips around the straw could cause fine lines
- Some TikTokers have adopted ‘anti-wrinkle straws’ to combat the aging effect
- READ MORE: Company Behind Viral Stanley Cups Sued Over Lead Contamination
<!–
<!–
<!–
<!–
<!–
<!–
The Stanley water bottle that had mothers and daughters raiding stores in the hope of getting their hands on one could cause premature skin ageing.
While the product has taken the internet by storm, a plastic surgeon revealed that the trendy water bottle, hailed for its straw and easy-to-hold handle, could actually be causing wrinkles.
And Stanley is not alone. Any product or drinking method that requires pursing your lips could cause wrinkles around your mouth.
TikTok users warn that continuously drinking from a Stanley straw could cause wrinkled lines around the lips, commonly known as “smoker’s lines.”
Dr Lara Devgan, a plastic surgeon, said: “The long-term effect of repeated pursing and drinking through a straw or other movements that cause pursing of the lips is the development of fine lines in that area.”
The popular fire extinguishers are also facing multiple lawsuits after the company admitted that its viral cups contain some amount of lead.
Social media users warn that continuously drinking from the Stanley glass straw could cause fine lines around the lips.
It happens because the skin is “like a piece of paper,” he said. said the New York Post.
‘If you fold repeatedly [lips] Over and over again in the same folding patterns, you will get etched lines and it will become harder and harder to go away. “When we see people drinking through straws repeatedly, those lines become deeper and deeper,” he added.
Celebrity esthetician ReneĆ© Rouleau also told Marie Claire that pursing your lips will “encourage the breakdown of collagen and elasticity more quickly,” which can lead to wrinkles.
Wrinkles around the mouth are often called smoker’s lines because it is common for people who smoke to develop them by repeatedly pursing their lips around a cigarette, but smokers are not the only ones at risk.
Anyone who frequently purses their lips can develop the marks, including people who make duck faces for selfies or while putting on makeup.
The muscle surrounding the lips, known as the orbicularis oris, guides their shape and movement and is shaped like purse straps.
Narrowing the lips causes more tension on the skin, which causes wrinkles, Dr. Devgan explained.
TikTok user Lauren Erro recently went viral on TikTok after showing off the new ‘anti-wrinkle straws’ she uses.
In the video, which has been viewed almost four million times, Erro is seen drinking from two different straws, one shaped like lips and another with a horizontal top, allowing the drinker to place their entire mouth over the opening in instead of pursing his lips around her. .
However, there is limited evidence to suggest that these straws actually work to stop wrinkles from forming.
TikTok user Lauren Erro went viral on TikTok after showing off ‘anti-wrinkle straws’
The potentially creasing straw isn’t the only problem with the popular Stanley mug.
Popular fire extinguishers are facing lawsuits after the company admitted that its viral cups contain some amount of lead.
Several California and Nevada consumers have filed class action lawsuits against Stanley Cups’ parent company, Seattle-based Pacific Market International, LLC.
Four California whistleblowers said the company falsely advertised its cups as “BPA free” but failed to warn the public that lead is a “key ingredient” in its vacuum seal, in a Feb. 1 filing seeking $70 million. of dollars.
They claim they bought Stanley glasses before the company’s announcement in January and insist they would not have bought them if they had known they contained lead.
‘Our manufacturing process currently employs the use of an industry standard pellet to seal the vacuum insulation into the base of our products; “The sealing material includes some lead,” Stanley said on his support page.
A Stanley spokesperson confirmed that the bottles use lead in the manufacturing process, but that it poses no harm to drinkers unless the bottle is damaged.
An additional statement on the company’s website also said that there is no lead present on the surface of its glass that could come into contact with drinkers.