Laser hair removal. What’s it all about and how can you help it be successful?

Laser hair removal can be a magical thing. We take a laser with a specific beam link to specifically target the juicy root bulb of the hair follicle in it’s active phase and voila! Hair falls out and stays gone! I’m talking permanently gone! It beats a lifetime of painful waxing in my book any day.

So, as I mentioned, laser hair removal is effective when it targets the juicy root bulb of the hair follicle when it’s in its active phase of growth. Well how often is that? For all hair from the waist up, it is about every four weeks. With all hair below the waist, it is about every eight weeks. About how many sessions does it take, depending on the hairiness of the patient, to remove it completely and permanently? It takes an average of six of those monthly or bi-monthly session per body part. It is not a one and done scenario so if you are expecting that, you will be disappointed. Now if you are hairy like a bear or wolf, it may require more. The laser can only do so much

How do you increase the success and decrease the discomfort of your hair removal sessions? First, come on time at the proper intervals. Second, have yourself shaved to the point that there is only a few mm of hair sticking up above the skin surface. Third, have you skin absolutely bare with no lotions, potions, or tanners or cleansers. If there are any substances on your skin, it can confuse or worse, intensify the beam and you will get burned. This is why it’s important to read all those papers and follow the instructions.

I would also advise that you get an actual consult with a test spot before you pay for laser hair removal. This way you can get a small spot treatment with the laser, observe for 24 hours and make sure there is no skin reaction and that the settings picked are appropriate.

Lastly, not every laser can treat every skin type. All lasers are not created equal. Skin types 1 thru 3 and Asian skin type 4 require a shorter Alex beam. Darker Hispanic, Indian, and African American skin types are type 5 and 6 and require the longer Yag beam. Without using the proper beam, the laser could get confused between the patient’s skin pigment and the pigment of the hair. Then, skin damage or burning could occur.

Hope this clears things up. Here’s to being hair free!

Dr. Katz

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