blr_p said:
Why i said drastic is because once its removed its gone, forever. After having been so used to hair growing back it would feel odd not to have it grow back again, ever. Now if it was painful in anyway prior to the laser then this would very well be a welcome change. Otherwise there's this missing 'phantom limb' thing. I read that laser is classified as semi-permanent in the sense hair has grown back for some ppl that underwent it, tho i'm told this is more in the case of ppl that have lighter hair than not.
Secondly, laser is a new treatment in comparison to say electrolysis which has been studied for a much longer time. Is there a chance of future complications later on in life as a result of laser ? No one knows. Nothing nasty has turned up so far.
Laser isnt permanent hair 'removal', its permanent hair 'reduction'. Theres literally 0 chance if any complication unless the doc and the patient are both idiots. If you did some research on the matter, every frequency and strength of a laser has some form of reaction on the body, in this case the hair laser targets the absorbtion frequency of the pigment in the hair to burn it and cease the stem cells from proliferating along with the sebacious glands which produce acne and ingrown hair. It's used for everything from circumcision to brain surgery, hell dude, people who lose their penile skin from degloving and get split skin thickness grafts have to get laser done once the graft has taken root, do you think docs would do that if it isnt safe? If you did some more research on it, take fraxel for example to treat collagen repair by non invasive techniques, or say lasers for treatment of varicose veins youd realise these have been done for decades now. The age of electrolysis and laser are the same, laser was far more expensive to fabricate until the late 90's.
The difference is electrolsysis is FAR FAR MORE painful than laser and its permanent, theres FAR more risk in electrolysis than laser will ever have.
blr_p said:
Thirdly, is there any chance of being permanently
disfigured as a result of this treatment.
Fourthly, i'm not sure i never want to grow a beard in the future, its unlikely tho i'd like to keep the option open.
Fifthly, what kind of a shadow will you have if you do not shave for several days.
- Like I said, theres no chance unless both you and your doc are both morons. I specified my settings, depth, energy per sq i. If youre a moron who leaves it to the doc like he's god obviously he's gonna screw you up.
- Like I said, its not removal, it's reduction...
- Shadow? what? I'm presently LOVING not having to shave everyday. It's such an amazing sense of freedom. No blister, no rashes, no cuts, no foam, no blades , ahhh. I was actually waiting for this day till the point the hair became thick and hard because the thicker and harder they are, the more effective the laser is at lower settings.
blr_p said:
Lastly, the degree of laser being sought. Now in your case you mention thinning but you also said upto 70% was going to be removed. The thinning part i can understand but going full out would be odd, because then your face would resemble a pre-pubescent boy. I can get it very smooth after a few passes but the hair roots and darker tone are still visibly present, it just can't be felt coming from different directions. Now unless you happen to be like that naturally it would be hard to keep a secret and ppl would kinda want to know what happened and learn you actually paid to get this done. Is this such a thing you could live with.
Understand that i'm not knocking your choice here as its a personal one.
I think there's some confusion, lemme explain it a little better.
What is the principle behind a hair laser, its basically "hair reduction"
What is reduction? How does reduction happen?
- Damaging hair root stem cells : since obviously we're talking stem cells here, you cannot damage all of them because to do that youd have to damage the surrounding dermis. No only a certain % of it gets damaged from the laser depending on the setting. This determines the future of that hair strand. If the laser was set to high, more stem cells were damaged, if the laser was set to say 5, then 50% of the stem cells were damaged, making thick hair, 50% less thick.
- Reduced hair growth cycle ( aka increasing the time between shaves because say if the laser was set to 5, 50% of the stem cells for that hair root have been damaged and reabsorbed back into the skin by catabolization thus that hair strand takes 50% more time to grow in and its much softer once it does and not razor sharp.
Also, whats the deal with keeping it a secret? We're not living in the dark ages anymore, get with the times. I told all my friends and colleagues at work way before, they all thought the result was awesome. The girls are always touching my face