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#284949 - 07/02/08 03:26 AM
Re: Laser hair removal... How bad did I screw up?
[Re: ClaireNB]
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Anarcho-Nihilist Cow
Registered: 03/31/03
Loc: Barn
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It's better to have more treatments than getting burned.
I've seen a girl who got badly burnt by laser ("flash" thermolysis) and it produced a scar about 4" long by 1" wide across her upper lip.
A 50% kill rate is very good. In time, that may be as low as 30%, but a normal course of laser treatments is usually about 4-6 treatments plus 3-4 touch ups.
So with an average 30% kill rate, after 5 treatments you have:
(0.7)^5 = 0.168 = 16.8% of hairs left, concentrated on some areas.
Add 3 touch ups in those areas and you have about 6% of hairs left, with most of them white.
An average beard has about 10,000 to 20,000 hairs. That means you'd have about 600-1,200 hairs left after the laser course is done.
That's about 3 hours of blend electrolysis.
With me, the kill rate was about 60% after each session and 50% long term (can only calculate that post facto, of course) so I was left with about 0.4% of hairs. That is, about 50 white hairs that took forever to grow (and I got rid of half of them already with half an hour of electro).
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#286502 - 07/19/08 10:22 AM
Re: Laser hair removal... How bad did I screw up?
[Re: BraveandCrazy]
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Anarcho-Nihilist Cow
Registered: 03/31/03
Loc: Barn
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You're mistaken. At least in the USA. The FDA, who regulates such items, still does not permit laser to be advertised as permanent hair removal. Some people do this anyway, but laser IS NOT cleared as permanent by the FDA. I'm not in the USA and, frankly, I don't have much confidence in your FDA (which seems to be easily influenced by politics and special interests). They block some drugs and make generics hard to commercialize to benefit the big pharma interests that have your congresspeople in the pocket. http://www.ucsusa.org/news/press_release/fda-scientists-pressured.htmlAt any rate, since 1998 some laser machines have been cleared by the FDA as producing "permanent hair reduction": http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer/laserfacts.htmlSeveral manufacturers received FDA permission to claim, "permanent reduction," NOT "permanent removal" for their lasers. This means that although laser treatments with these devices will permanently reduce the total number of body hairs, they will not result in a permanent removal of all hair. The specific claim granted is "intended to effect stable, long-term, or permanent reduction" through selective targeting of melanin in hair follicles. Permanent hair reduction is defined as the long-term, stable reduction in the number of hairs re-growing after a treatment regime, which may include several sessions. The number of hairs regrowing must be stable over time greater than the duration of the complete growth cycle of hair follicles, which varies from four to twelve months according to body location. Permanent hair reduction does not necessarily imply the elimination of all hairs in the treatment area. Which is exactly what I said, permanent hair reduction understood as killing only a percent of the hair. When that percent is 50% or more, the final results will leave you very pleased. But there is no way to know what the percent of regrowth will be after two years. I know several people who are very happy with the end results (myself included), but also a few who are not. Personally, my only regret is that lasers capable of treating my skin tone were not available before (they only hit the market in 2002). Electrolysis was time consuming, it did some slight damage to my skin and cost me a lot of money without showing much for it. PS: B&C, read what you quote please. In my post I never said "permanent hair removal" but "permanent hair reduction." It's annoying when one is misquoted.
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#286511 - 07/19/08 12:08 PM
Re: Laser hair removal... How bad did I screw up?
[Re: Charlene_Leona]
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Registered: 02/06/07
Loc: Oz
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The company I'm using has a two year guarantee on their process. I hope it works as advertised. Laser only effects the hair that is actually growing at the time. Typically, only about 10% of the hair on say, your arm, is actually growing. The other 90% has stopped growing and just hasn't fallen out yet. And there are still al lot of hair follicles for which the hair has already fallen out and they have not started producing hair yet. So when you get your first treatment, you will notice it all go away, and then only a little start growing in. But the ones that have started growing in were not even affected by that first treatment, and neither were about 90% of the ones that disappeared. So you will need many treatments over the course of about 8-12 months to treat each hair follicle only once. So a 50% reduction at that point will make all of your hair 50% thinner and lighter in color. Your next round of treatments might achieve 50% further reduction. Do after 16-24 treatments, you might see a 75% reduction in the thickness and color of the hair. At that point, electrolysis is probably the best bet to achieve final removal. As far as electrolysis goes, flash thermolysis is faster, less expensive, and (imo) less painful than blend, but it is much more likely to cause permanent scarring. Since your hair is now growing more slowly you will need to space out your laser sessions a bit.
_________________________
AKA Smapdi. IANYL. TINLA.
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