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Hair:
Hair is an adornment to our face and body, yet excessive hair growth can
be embarrassing and unattractive. If you desire permanent removal of unwanted
hair electrolysis is your only option.
Affectors: Hormones, stress, medications, heredity, and diet all
affect hair growth and loss. Thus, the length of treatment to permanently
remove hair, varies for each person and also depends on the size of the
area to be removed.
Temporary or Non-Permanent Removal: Methods such as tweezing and
waxing only make unwanted hair worse by attracting additional blood to
follicle growth cells. Other methods such as depilatories and laser are
temporary as well. Do not mistake the term permanent hair reduction
for permanent hair removal. You will see advertisements for laser
that claim the former. Electrolysis is the only FDA approved method
for permanent hair removal. The FDA does not allow laser specialists
to claim permanent hair removal because over time hair regrows following
treatments.
Hair Growth and Regrowth: Some hair reappears in seemingly
the same place but is usually growing in a new follicle. Each square inch
of skin contains several hundred hair follicles, some of which are actively
growing hairs and others that are lying dormant. Hair normally grows for
its usual cycle and then naturally sheds and replaces itself. The electrologist
can only treat the hairs they can see. When dormant follicles become active
over time future treatments are required. The length of time required to
completely treat an area depends on the severity of the problem, the causes,
the type of hair, sensitivity of the skin, and the sensitivity of the patient.
Once an area is successfully treated it may require short followup treatments
at infrequent intervals in the future.
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