
About the Author
John Mack is an experienced executive with a background in pharmaceutical marketing communications, interactive technologies and medical privacy. His career has been dedicated to developing and applying best practices, enabling companies to do business more effectively, with greater ROI, and with enhanced trust. Mr. Mack provides leadership roles within many associations and councils focusing on health information, quality, privacy and adoption of technology to healthcare. He also blogs at www.pharmamkting.blogspot.com, and runs the popular Pharma Marketing Network.








It’s just silly of you to obsess over the possibility of Latisse causing iris pigmentation. As you are aware, Latisse is not instilled in the eyeball, it is applied with a thin brush. As you are aware, Latisse did not cause iris darkening in the trials. This side effect was only seen in Lumigan users, the bimatoprost formulation that is in eyedrop form.
Yes, there’s the possibility of the iris turning black if the woman has an iq of 55 and can’t read the instructions and brushes that stuff all over her eyeball. Yes, there’s a possibility of the iris turning dark if elves hold the woman down and pour gallons of Latisse in her eye. Yes, there’s a possibility of the iris turning dark if someone were to swim in a pool full of Latisse without eye goggles. Yes, there’s a possibility of the iris turning dark well if the factory were to explode and rain down Latisse into a person’s eyeball.
There’s a chance that your eyeglasses could break, and the glass could shatter and rip up your eyeballs. Better get contacts. Oh no, there’s a chance the contacts could get contaminated in that dirty solution and blind you. Lasix? Well that’s a laser. The laser machine might go bananas and explode your brain, and spew bloody brain tissue everywhere.
Fear mongerer