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#54716 - 08/08/08 04:12 PM My LHR history (male) / Need help
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Hi,

First, I apologize this will be a longer post than average. Second, it is kept long in case some may find it informative. Third, I am looking for help to obtain a natural look on my ARMS & FACE and want to hear your opinions on how these areas will look in near and distant future.

I am a 28 y/old male with skin Type II-III. I've always bothered about my widespread hairiness, and it was the primary reason why I had very low self-confidence during the majority of my life. Except for some part of the lower back, my body was covered with terminal hairs. Around 3 years ago, after experimenting with hair trimming on my arms, I decided to start laser hair removal treatments. I've had so many treatments at different centers and at erratic times that I can't exactly remember most of the treatment dates and specs, however here with the help of "a treatment record" pertaining to my earliest ones, I will try my best to list them below:



RETROSPECTIVE CURRENT MOOD FOR EACH TREATMENT SESSION:

(A) Excellent Satisfaction: (1) (2) (6) (7) (11) (14) (20)
(B) Moderate Satisfaction: (3) (4) (5) (8) (10) (27) (28)
(C) Dissatisfaction: (9) (12) (16) (19) (21) (22) (24) (25) (29)
(D) Extreme dissatisfaction: (17) (18) (23) (26) (30)
(E) Ultra Extreme dissatisfaction: (13) (15)
No judgment yet: (31) (32) (33) (34)

JUDGMENT CRITERIA: First, It is inevitable that my judgments are subjective according to my expectations and same physical results may lead to completely different satisfaction levels for other people. The criteria is, as the correlation between my expectations and the results from my perspective goes on course from strong to weak, my satisfaction levels changes from (A) to (E) including the intermediate steps (B) (C) and (D). The clarification of my expectations and the results from my perspective are as follows:

MY EXPECTATIONS:
Chest -> %50 even reduction
Abs -> %80 even reduction
Upper back and shoulders -> %90 reduction
Upper legs -> %70 reduction
Lower legs -> %50 even reduction
Nape -> %80 reduction
Eyebrows outline -> %80 reduction
Cheeks -> %70 even reduction
Beard -> %50 even reduction
Upper arms -> %80 even reduction
Lower arms -> %50 and %80 even reduction on outer side and inner sides, respectively.

CURRENT RESULTS FROM MY PERSPECTIVE:
Chest -> %80 even reduction
Abs -> %60 even reduction
Upper back and shoulders -> %50 reduction
Upper legs -> %50 reduction
Lower legs -> %60 uneven reduction
Nape -> %80 reduction
Eyebrows outline -> %70 reduction
Cheeks -> %90 uneven reduction
Beard (sides, neck) -> %50 slight uneven reduction
Beard (mustache, goatee, chin) -> %?? very uneven reduction
Upper arms -> %50 even increase
Lower arms -> %60 very uneven and %60 slight uneven reduction on outer side and inner sides, respectively.

Additionally, my one general observation on results is: because (I suspect) I had far far more terminal hairs than the vellus ones, cleared zones only have terminal hairs placed sparsely and not accompanied with vellus hairs (except a very few ones), and this brings an unnatural look without question.

Looking at my results and considering what went through the treatments, I can say there are many factors having impact on permanent results. If I were to make priority list of major factors considering a hair reduction for males rather than a complete removal, it would be:
1. LHR performer's performance
2. Settings used (including laser type)
3. Body's response
4. Treatment schedule, treated person's actions
This is a personal list and I would exclude the beard area from this list's domain, since chance seems to have a very dominant role where the subject is an area filled of very densely and closely spaced coarse hairs.

Getting back to my results and concerns; of all the areas treated, there still remains some regions devoid of hair. I want to restore hair in these regions to match the neighbor regions and know if it is at all possible and again if it is possible at what cost. Now, I have to stop as this post is getting tedious to read at once. I'd be thankful if you can give me some advice and comment on, and be happy to give further details if anyone needs so.

Thanks.

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#54720 - 08/08/08 08:11 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
Okay, thanks. I didn't quite follow the retrospective mood part? Could you help me out on that one?

You have listed 34 treatments that you received on several areas and your results certainly exceeded your expectations for most areas. For the patchiness, I don't know how you can "put hair back" on these areas, but you can even them out with electrolysis.

I am not advisng this, but I seem to remember that a poster from a long while back was talking about using Rogaine, but I don't kow what came of it.

Thank you for your detailed post.

Dee
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54722 - 08/08/08 08:17 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: dfahey]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
How long has it been since your last treatment on each area? You should give it a good 4-6 months to see what will come in on any one area.

Without settings on the diode and GentleLASE, it's impossible to tell if the settings were high enough to kill the hair.

Overall, it seems like you got a pretty good reduction on all areas given that laser works best on coarse hair and that you didn't have that many treatments on each area. But of course it's hard to tell without exact settings.

It seems that alexandrite and diode was used on you at various points of your treatments.

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#54740 - 08/09/08 09:35 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
I couldn't find how to edit previous posts, so I am making here an update for my earlier post on top. It seems, the sessions list, which I uploaded as an image, was cut-off from right side (well, not actually cut-off, but it is bothersome to go the end of the post, scroll right, read, come back, scroll left, come back again, etc.), so I am posting here a link so you can open it in a separate window.



or

http://i37.tinypic.com/2mnktq9.jpg

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#54743 - 08/09/08 10:00 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: dfahey]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
dfahey:

>Okay, thanks. I didn't quite follow the retrospective mood part? Could you help me out on that one?

Sorry, I accept it is confusing. I wanted to say, I had some positive or negative feelings and judgments right after I came out from a session, 2 weeks later, 2 months later, more later, etc. As I went in for other sessions and my LHR experience progressed, I acquired a comprehensive review and assessments of events combined all together. And so, I came to a conclusion at the end, if a session was helpful or not. That's what I meant by "retrospective current".

>You have listed 34 treatments that you received on several areas and your results certainly exceeded your expectations for most areas. For the patchiness, I don't know how you can "put hair back" on these areas, but you can even them out with electrolysis.

Yes, some results exceeded and some others not. But, I opt not to say for most areas. Area-size wise, yes it is for the most part. But, I am not happy with my arm and beard results at all, and these areas are the ones I gave the most importance. They are like the showcase.

I will think about electrolysis and have some questions about it which I want to ask you at the end of this post. And yes, it can't do anything for patchiness. frown

>I am not advisng this, but I seem to remember that a poster from a long while back was talking about using Rogaine, but I don't kow what came of it.

I am not sure about this Rogaine. Has it been proven to increase hair growth on body. If it's been, how effective it is? Also, it is not very viable for me to use Rogaine for only the hair free parts and not smudge it to hairy areas. Not to mention I have to dedicate myself into using it for a long time.

About electrolysis:
For LHR, we know that there is a regrowth, which is less coarse and lower in numbers. LHR claims that the hair is destroyed for good, the regrowing one is another hair from the same follicle. Is that the same for Electrolysis? To be more specific, if I see a hair coming out of a pore, and electrolysis kills it, will I see another hair emerging from the same spot. Is electrolysis more effective than LHR? I mean if there is regrowth, is it weaker than the case in LHR?

If I decide to take a plunge into electrolysis, I will have to find an expert to make sure the hairs are will be even. It's not a trivial job. And this expert thing is another story which makes me nervous.

Thanks for your answer and the electrolysis tip.

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#54744 - 08/09/08 10:01 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: lagirl]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
lagirl:

> How long has it been since your last treatment on each area? You should give it a good 4-6 months to see what will come in on any one area.

I included the treatment date for each session in my list on the first post. There are two "@@@@Long Break@@@@" statements; they mean I didn't have any sessions for an long period of time which is considered much longer than an interval between two LHR sessions. I don't know if this is a wise thing to do at a middle point of ongoing treatments, but I did. However, it has at least one advantage that it gave me a chance to assess the results for me. 1 year is a reasonable time to see permanence or the permanence signs if you ask me. And I gave two 1 year long breaks.

At the end of the second break, you can also see it in the list, I went to a couple of sessions for Upper Back, Upper Arms, Moustache, and some parts of Chin. For the chin, I didn't cover the area completely because I wanted to even out the hairs.

> Without settings on the diode and GentleLASE, it's impossible to tell if the settings were high enough to kill the hair.

At the 1st Center, except the very last few treatments, I had a very good experience and I also obtained treatment records belonging my good experience. Before going to other centers, since I knew which earlier settings were used on me, I told every doctor and technician to use at least 25 J/cm2. Some disputed, some said OK. But I put a lower limit for myself as 20 J/cm2, and I ensured every center at least used this setting. So, I am pretty sure that on my list where the setting is not written down, the setting is at least 20 J/cm2. And it ranges from 20 to 25 J. For the beard area I even convinced them to apply 30 J.

Yes, I have problems with killing hairs on my beard. But, for the other areas the problem is not that they use a low setting, instead sometimes they don't properly overlap. Adding the touch-up effect, this disrupts hair growth cycles differently for each hair, not to mention they accidentally overuse the laser for some areas which turn out to be relatively hairless stand-out regions easily detected by foreign eyes.

>Overall, it seems like you got a pretty good reduction on all areas given that laser works best on coarse hair and that you didn't have that many treatments on each area. But of course it's hard to tell without exact settings.

LHR works pretty well on coarse hair in my experience.

>It seems that alexandrite and diode was used on you at various points of your treatments.

Yes, Alex and Diode were used. To be more specific:

Cnosure Apogee9300 (Alex)
?????? (Diode)
Cynosure Elite (This has two lasers: Alex, Nd/YAG. I wanted them to use Alex, but they might have used Nd/YAG on my beard, I am not sure)
Candela GentleLase (Alex)

Finally, I have to say this: for each session at least 20 J/cm2 were used, and if they properly overlapped I had excellent body response (hair shedding). But, for some regions, which are shoulders, upper back, upper arms and upper legs, I didn't have complete shedding. I suspect these are very androgen sensitive areas for me and whatever setting I use I can never accomplish complete shedding. To sum up; I didn't have any problems with settings except the beard area.

Thanks for your questions which helped me to clarify some issues.

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#54745 - 08/09/08 10:11 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
I am planning to post some result photos; unfortunately I couldn't take photos when my treatments were ongoing. But, at least you can see the final results. I am not sure when I can have some time for a shooting job. Maybe in a weeks time.

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#54746 - 08/09/08 10:49 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
- Without knowing pulse and spot size settings used, it's impossible to tell whether those were high or low. Those other two factors determine this. 20J on LightSheer with 100ms and 9mm spot size is low. 20J with 12mm spot size and 20ms is not bad, though not very high either.

- Settings cannot be compared across types of lasers. So 20J on alex and 20J on the Yag and 20J on GentleLASE can be completely different, especially since you didn't provide the pulse and spot size setting (spot size is very important on GentleLASE since pulse is stable at 3ms. 20J on 18mm is max and high setting on this machine, but 20J on 10mm is very low).

- Beard is a very hard to treat area. Overlapping and settings make a huge difference in terms of getting an even reduction. Seems like that was a big problem here.

- Yes, laser works best on coarse hair as you experienced.

- Yes, taking a long break in the middle of the treatments makes you have more treatments in the long run overall because the hair becomes unsynchronized again.

- It's hard to answer your question about electrolysis because it's not really the right question to ask. Hair grows in several phases. That's why multiple treatments are needed and that's why you see hair "return". It's not "returning" (unless the settings were too low) - what you see after a good treatment is NEW hair in the NEXT PHASE show up. So with electrolysis you need multiple treatments for the same reason, but each hair can be killed on the first try. Some coarse and deep hairs may take a few zaps. But just realize that you have several phases of hair on the same area. So whatever you see at any one point is only at most 30% of the hair you actually have on that area.

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#54752 - 08/09/08 11:44 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: lagirl]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
lagirl:

Ok, I don't know exactly what settings were used, but in my previous post I made a point that, except the beard, I had good shedding which leads me to think the settings were enough, I mean not low. And we agree on, once a hair sheds, it is said to have given response to laser. I am not sure here, if we can always say if hair sheds then it is always true that LHR was successful. From my perspective, if the hair sheds then laser was enough, meaning settings were not low. But, it does not mean that laser settings were high. If it was high then it was not a proper treatment. Here, we have to name what a proper treatment is. One can say, the settings should not be high, so the skin does not get burned; it doesn't cause pigmentation, etc. What else?

One conclusion from the paragraph above, my settings were not low. I am not sure about if they were high. I didn't suffer from any side effects, so I conclude they were not high either. Here I am overlooking any unseen effect of high settings: f.e. improper high settings may be destroying the hair, but in the next cycle making the another hair from the same follicle grow stronger. So, if we had lower setting, we would end up with finer hair. Can this be true?

>Yes, taking a long break in the middle of the treatments makes you have more treatments in the long run overall because the hair becomes unsynchronized again.

Can you back up your theory with a published research or a real life case? May long breaks adds up to patchiness since it breaks synchronization?

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#54755 - 08/09/08 12:20 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
- If the hair sheds, it was affected. However, that doesn't necessarily mean that the settings were high enough to destroy the follicle, not just damage it.

- Search for SSLHR's posts on this forum where he explains synchronization. Basically, when hair is syncronized that means all the visible hair is in the same first growth phase - the phase when it can be killed. You can also get to it by waxing prior to first treatment or prior to first treatment after a long break.

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#54788 - 08/10/08 05:41 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: lagirl]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Quote:
- If the hair sheds, it was affected. However, that doesn't necessarily mean that the settings were high enough to destroy the follicle, not just damage it.


This makes sense, I also want to know if there is any way to tell whether the follicle is destroyed or damaged.

Quote:
Search for SSLHR's posts on this forum where he explains synchronization


sslhr mentions about synchronization, but doesn't explain it thoroughly. Based on your discussion, synchronization is a parameter having direct effect on number of treatments (f.e. if you catch all the hair synchronized in anagen phase then you have a good success rate), and if synchronization is somehow gotten out of way, it leads to patchiness. And two things, that can cause dissynchronization, from the top of my mind are, either the practitioner performs a patchy job, or you pluck hairs randomly during course of time (weeks, months, years). And the best way to synchronize hair seems to be waxing the area as you told so. This is bad news for me, as I waxed my arms 9 months ago, the hair came back extremely patchy; I haven't gone to LHR since then and my arms are still patchy if not as patchy as the first day.

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#54789 - 08/10/08 05:54 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: vklepil]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
Either get more laser treatments for the patchiness or get electrolysis to even it out. Laser is possible if your hair structure is thick and dark enough. Electrolysis allows individual hair follicles to be selected no matter what the color and structure. You have some choices here.
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54799 - 08/10/08 11:14 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Quote:
Either get more laser treatments for the patchiness or get electrolysis to even it out. Laser is possible if your hair structure is thick and dark enough. Electrolysis allows individual hair follicles to be selected no matter what the color and structure. You have some choices here.


I had some time lately and I am posting some photos as I promised. What do you think I should do? All I want is to have a natural look.


I may reduce the hair on abs, but I wish little more hair on chest.


It is somewhat messed up.


There are bald spots.


Left arm. Want to reduce hair seen especially on 2nd and 3rd.



Edited by vklepil (08/10/08 12:25 PM)

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#54800 - 08/10/08 11:16 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: dfahey]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
There is no real way to tell whether the hair was killed and not just damaged. That's why we recommend to treat at highest settings your skin can handle safely.

If you waxed and saw patchy growth afterwards, it means your previous treatments killed various spots of hair. What I would do in your situation is wax and get laser treatments on the areas that show hair (within 3-5 weeks after the hair comes out). Electrolysis is also an option, especially if these patches don't have coarse hair.

Judging from your photos:

- Your chest and stomach and lower arms definitely have coarse dark hair that can be treated with laser. You seem very light, so I would advise to look for GentleLASE clinic and test spot for highest settings you can handle. Try to use 18mm spot size and see how close you can get to 20J max without burning your skin. Anything 16J and above on 18mm should be very effective.

- Your face actually looks pretty normal to me. I can see what you're talking about in terms of a couple patches, but I don't think I would have noticed it at all if I wasn't looking for them. It looks pretty natural to me. The upper lip looks most dense, which is normal. That's usually the hardest part to treat, along with the chin on males. You may want to do a couple passes there with laser. Other than that I would leave the rest of the face along unless you're looking for more reduction. And if you are, I would only let someone with lots of experience on this specific area on males treat you because overlapping and settings are very important here.

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#54801 - 08/10/08 11:17 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116

Right arm. Same with left arm: want to reduce seen on 2nd and 3rd.


Left hand. Hair is not uniform. There are some bald spots. Wish to restore hair on those.

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#54802 - 08/10/08 11:18 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116

Right hand. Patchy. Wish to restore hair especially on inner wrist and right hand side top of the hand.

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#54805 - 08/10/08 11:24 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
Honestly, I don't really notice the patchiness. Normal patterns of growth almost always have slight patchiness. It's not noticeable and is considered normal. You do have quite a bit of dark coarse hair on your lower arms still, so I think treating that area will help the rest feel more uniform (though I really don't see it).

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#54807 - 08/10/08 11:33 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
I forgot to mention how long ago I got LHR for each area I posted the photos for. My treatment record is also in the first page of this thread. (Note: I've just now noticed that I made mistake on that record. I omitted my first Full Arms treatment. It is not on the list, and it should be in November 2005. On this first arms treatment, I had excellent satisfaction: All the hair completely shed and I had very uniform regrowth.) Anyway, back to the photos:


Chest and Abs - 3rd (last) treatment 2.5 years ago

Mustache and Chin - 6th (last) (including touch ups) treatment 1 month ago. But in the 5th and 6th treatments, I only covered half of the mustache and chin.

Neck - 4th (last) 14 months ago.

Arms and Hands - 5th (last) 14 months ago. I also waxed my arms 9 months ago.



Edited by vklepil (08/10/08 12:27 PM)

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#54809 - 08/10/08 11:59 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help [Re: lagirl]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Quote:
- Your chest and stomach and lower arms definitely have coarse dark hair that can be treated with laser. You seem very light, so I would advise to look for GentleLASE clinic and test spot for highest settings you can handle. Try to use 18mm spot size and see how close you can get to 20J max without burning your skin. Anything 16J and above on 18mm should be very effective.


I went up to 25J Apogee9300 (Alex laser) with 15 mm2 spot. I don't how many joules "25J on 15mm2" corresponds to on 18mm2. But, I think it should be over 16J. I am happy with the results though I wish to switch the hair amounts of chest and abs.

Quote:
Your face actually looks pretty normal to me. I can see what you're talking about in terms of a couple patches, but I don't think I would have noticed it at all if I wasn't looking for them. It looks pretty natural to me


I agree, in close up it looks natural. But, if I don't shave for 1 day, in a meters distance it really looks weird. Now, I am afraid of using laser on my face, because you really can't guess what the outcome will be. I will not risk it.

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#54810 - 08/10/08 12:10 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: lagirl]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Quote:
Honestly, I don't really notice the patchiness. Normal patterns of growth almost always have slight patchiness. It's not noticeable and is considered normal. You do have quite a bit of dark coarse hair on your lower arms still, so I think treating that area will help the rest feel more uniform (though I really don't see it).


I tried to make it noticeable in the photos. However, my hair is long, and longer hairs cover up the bald patches to some extent. Also, some degree of detail is lost in the photos. Furthermore my hair is wavy in the photos, this is another reason why it is hard to see patchiness. If I comb my hair, it will be easier to notice.

Apart from patchiness, my main complaint is that my hair is sparsely placed and it is coarse, and this contributes to unnatural look. Now, if I continue LHR and as a result if some coarse hair is eliminated and some other coarse hair stays, then the hairs will be placed more sparsely, and it will look more unnatural; bald patches will be easier to notice.


Edited by vklepil (08/10/08 12:30 PM)

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#54813 - 08/10/08 01:18 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
GentleLASE has a stable very low pulse duration of 3ms. On Apogee, pulse ranges from 5ms to 100ms or so. So without knowing the pulse, it's still hard to say whether those are high settings. They're probably average. If it's close to 5ms, the setting was in fact pretty high. If it's closer to 100ms, it wasn't. On 15mm, GentleLASE max is 30J, but once again that's with 3ms. If pulse is higher, the overall power is lower.

It sounds like you don't trust laser to do a good job of evening out the reduction at this point. What you can do is use a Yag laser which targets mostly the very coarse hair. So that may achieve what you're looking for. Otherwise, with electrolysis, you can pick and choose specific hairs you want removed.

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#54817 - 08/10/08 02:13 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: lagirl]
Choice Offline
Top 20 Contributor

Registered: 07/24/02
Posts: 316
Do you have before pictures? If so, I think you would see that it's not as patchy as you think. Even taking into consideration the longer facial stubble and the wavy uncombed arm hair, it still looks normal to me. Men (and women) who have never had any type of removal done have the same unevenness to their hair. Around the wrists, watches, gloves and sleeves tend to abrade the hair away.

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#54842 - 08/11/08 06:17 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: Choice]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
You still have a lot of hair. After viewing your pictures, it looks like you still need a lot of laser treatments. Electrolysis can bring you to a happy ending, but it would take hundreds and hundreds of hours for your arms, neck, face alone and lots of money and time. Even with the fastest most deadilest electrologist on earth, you would be putting in a lot of hours up front. I would concentrate on my face and neck if I were you, as shaving must be the most difficult part of your day. Since your stated you don't want laser on your face, if you choose to look into electrolysis, I strongly urge you to find the best in regard to skill and equipment factors. This would be vital for your success in a time frame you could live with. It still will not be easy, but there is no easy way down for a situation like yours, but the goods news is, there is a way down.
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54843 - 08/11/08 06:18 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: Choice]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
No, I don't have before pictures as detailed as these ones, so no comparison can be done.

I know it will sound emotionally shadowed, but before, I know my hair wasn't a bit patchy as it is now. Yes, memories can be disrupted, and we can make up new memories, however this time it is not, they are genuine. Before LHR I was so concerned with my hair (I am still concerned by the way), so I observed other people's hair patterns, I know how they are, and I still clearly do remember my hair pattern. So, I can tell you bad practitioners gave me a patchy embarrassment.


Edited by vklepil (08/11/08 10:32 AM)

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#54845 - 08/11/08 06:37 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Thanks Dee,

I am a pretty patient person. I've put considerable effort into reducing my hair till now, I can do more. But, the thing pisses me off is that in some occasions I opt to stay clear of social activities because I am constantly going through treatments, and during the treatments the hair and the skin really looks odd.

I can say overall, I've succeeded to reduce the amount of hair for way more than %50. This is close to my expectations before all these started. So, I am not so much bothered with the amount of hair now I have. I may just do a couple of more passes for inner and back facing sides of my arms, and continue with my shoulders and back. What I am not happy with is, it does not look like natural growth now. A couple of people, after seeing my arms, mentioned what I did my with hair; if I randomly clipped it wıth scissors or attempted to shave it. So, in conclusion, I am fine with the amount, but in the same time desperately looking for ways to arrange it.


Edited by vklepil (08/11/08 10:33 AM)

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#54846 - 08/11/08 06:44 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
I understand. There are many here that will be glad to offer you what ever support and advice you ask for. Permanent hair removal is tough and it is only for the tough-minded to pursue. I'm glad to hear you have patience.
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54852 - 08/11/08 10:13 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
PaleBoy Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 02/28/07
Posts: 87
Loc: London, U.K.
Just reading through your posts vklepil, why are you afraid to do laser on your face?
i am considering i thought from peoples opinion in here it should be okay as long as overlapping is done well. if there was patchy regrowth couldnt you just keep lasering missed patches, with touch ups?

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#54853 - 08/11/08 10:38 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: PaleBoy]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
I assume you want to get rid of your facial hair completely. I just want a uniform reduction. However each time I go for LHR, patchiness gets worse, then I go for touch-ups, but touch-ups have its downsides too. I don't want to stuck with a condition non-recoverable. Just think of pretty bald patch in the middle of your mustache reminding a person with ringworm.

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#54856 - 08/11/08 10:45 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
Getting a complete removal on a male face is not possible if you're a healthy male and not on hormonal drugs (like TG folks). You can get a good reduction, but a very good reduction will take many treatments (over 10-15) on this area because there is so much hair and it's so dense.

Treating various missed patches is what adds to the patchy effect. That's why it's important to have someone who knows what they're doing perform this and overlap from the beginning.

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#54864 - 08/11/08 02:57 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
tex Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 05/24/05
Posts: 181
Loc: North Texas (DFW), USA
The patchy result is a REAL concern and is NOT just from "sloppy" technique. I have had multiple treatments from a real laser applied with overlap by a major laser facility. I have had treatments at the maximum power settings and still have some regions of my beard that will not shed. Thus, I have some patches of course dark hair on my face that will not respond to many treatments and "touch ups" for which these hairs are specifically targeted.

I have received several explainations, but the bottom line is that some dark hair on white male faces can fail to ever be reduced by laser. Thus, electrolysis is the only solution to produce even distribution of hair patterns for such a situation. And even then, it takes time!

Originally Posted By: dfahey
Electrolysis can bring you to a happy ending, but it would take hundreds and hundreds of hours...

LOL, I know $70/hour can buy almost anything, but I have yet to get that kind of service! laugh
_________________________
Enjoy bein' a smoothie! Completed 2 years of LHR and started electrolysis in 2007 for face, neck, underarms, and male Brazilian on Type I/II skin.

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#54870 - 08/11/08 09:21 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: tex]
zsazsa9 Offline
Contributor

Registered: 07/06/08
Posts: 41
Loc: Ne Jersey
Tex, I will validate what was told to you. Yes,some dark hair on men's faces will not be targeted by laser. That is because there is a strong hormonal drive in males esp. in their 20's and 30's. Even with the best technology,equipment and practitioner,it is what it is. And even if you wanted to go for further laser treatments the result would be the same. As a practicing electrologist
for over 28 years and laser experience for 10,fine tuning with electrolysis is your best bet. A qualified electrologist should be able to treat enough hairs in 1 hour to make a significant difference.

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#54872 - 08/11/08 10:20 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: zsazsa9]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
I think that's the part that most people can't comprehend about electrolysis. When people read or hear electrolysis is all about treating one hair at a time, they erroneously conclude that is way too slow. Fact is, if one was told that a modernly equipped electrolgist can average 400-600 hairs per hour on one's face, that takes on a whole different meaning. Just tonight, I treated a young woman's facial areas and neck and 1,276 insertions were completed in 135 minutes. She walked out cleared of all coarse and medium hairs and will see me again in five or six weeks for another full clearance. Many electrologists repeat this scene everywhere, everyday. I don't think that is slow by any means. Fine tuning with electrolysis after laser goes even better than starting from scratch. Thanks Janet for your input.
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54875 - 08/12/08 12:32 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
James W. Walker VII, CPE Moderator Offline

Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 06/03/02
Posts: 4883
Loc: Buffalo NY, & Traveling the US...
I don't know about that hundreds of hours for a face thing. I am getting most male beards done in 100 to 150 hours - and that includes the neck hairs that frequently go into the chest.
_________________________
Setting a goal is not the main thing. It is deciding how you will go about achieving it and staying with that plan. --- Tom Landry

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#54881 - 08/12/08 06:23 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: James W. Walker VII, CPE]
dfahey Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 3701
Loc: Columbus, Ohio
May I give you a compliment, James? You have the ability and equipment to offer male beard removal in 100-150 hours, most electrologists can't do what you do in that time frame. Did you see vklepil's pictures? He's not even wanting total removal, so you could probably do better than 100 - 150 hours.
_________________________
Dee Fahey, R.N., C.T.
Licensed by the State Medical Board of Ohio for Nursing license and Cosmetic Therapy/Electrolysis license

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#54886 - 08/12/08 11:29 AM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: dfahey]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
100-150 hours is still quite a bit of hours. That's 15-20 full 8-10 hr days of treatment. Given that laser takes 8-15 treatment hours total on this area, i.e. 45 min-1 hour per treatment, I can see how people are apprehensive. It's a huge difference. I'm talking about just time spent on the table, not anything else here of course.

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#54896 - 08/12/08 01:33 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: lagirl]
PaleBoy Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 02/28/07
Posts: 87
Loc: London, U.K.
its very good to read this discussion and i think its making me think more carefully about my decision. I think i will not go for laser on my face due to many reasons mentioned above, but i will go for laser on the beard area around my neck, and do electrolysis on my face.

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#54904 - 08/12/08 09:30 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: PaleBoy]
zsazsa9 Offline
Contributor

Registered: 07/06/08
Posts: 41
Loc: Ne Jersey
Dee, Thank you for your acknowledgement. I think 100-150 hours to treat a man's beard is reasonable and accurate for permanent hair removal.

Although Laser hair removal and electrolysis are about unwanted hair, they are really two separate entities. Let's not lose sight of that. I am an electrologist and use both modalities.It is not about one being preferred over the other. There are numerous factors involed=the clients needs,immediate and long term,their expectations etc.. It is up to the pratitioner to decipher the information and determine what is in the clients best interest.

Because my profession has been very good to me,my mantra is, and I am sure every electrologist on this site remains "first do no harm"
-ethically or otherwise.

Janet
PS, I have used both the Alexandrite and the Diode. My preference is the diode because of its longer wavelength. Perhaps(and I am saying this without full awareness of the clients medical history)the patchinees that he speaks of is directly related to that issue.

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#54907 - 08/12/08 11:46 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: zsazsa9]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
That's interesting. You're probably the only person who's ever visited the forums who prefers a diode over GentleLASE. Unless you prefer it because it can treat more skin types, can you explain why? From your other post to which I responded it didn't seem like you knew the differences in settings, especially when comparing between the two machines. So I wonder if you weren't properly trained on the GentleLASE. GentleLASE consistently gets the best reviews from practitioners who visit this forum and from consumers. Of course, that's when using it at proper settings. You also mention that you treat all patients at 4 weeks intervals, which makes me wonder if they ever achieve a consistent stable permanent reduction and/or full shedding after every treatment. Can you clarify?

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#54923 - 08/13/08 12:11 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: zsazsa9]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
Quote:
PS, I have used both the Alexandrite and the Diode. My preference is the diode because of its longer wavelength. Perhaps(and I am saying this without full awareness of the clients medical history)the patchinees that he speaks of is directly related to that issue.


I am not quite sure about what you mean? Patchiness is due to Alexandrite or LHR in general?

Patchiness was related to improper overlapping by many on this forum. So, to discuss about overlapping on LHR, I've started a new thread at
http://www.hairtell.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/54922/Bringing_up_overlapping.html#Post54922

Your comments are welcome.

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#54924 - 08/13/08 01:31 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: vklepil]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
I think she was trying to say that the hairs on the face were deeper, so the diode was more effective on them. Given the other things mentioned, I'm not 100% results are achieved as claimed there though.

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#54978 - 08/15/08 05:21 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: lagirl]
rsuryase Offline
Contributor

Registered: 07/19/06
Posts: 14
vklepil, how long does it take for your arm hair to fully grow back after it's shaved or lasered?

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#54980 - 08/15/08 06:10 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: rsuryase]
lagirl Offline
Top 10 Contributor

Registered: 12/22/04
Posts: 5409
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
Shaving and lasering is not the same thing and gives completely different results, so that's not really the right question to ask. How quickly the hair grows differs, so his shaved arms may take shorter or longer than yours to grow back out. But general, the stubble is there within a day or two for most people.

Laser is a permanent solution. The same hair doesn't "grow back" after each treatment. After you treat an area, the hair sheds within 3 weeks. Then another 7-10 weeks later, NEW hair in the next growth phase shows up.

Please take a look at our FAQs at the link below.

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#54984 - 08/15/08 06:34 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: rsuryase]
vklepil Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 08/08/08
Posts: 116
The time needed for full (body) hair growth depends on multiple factors. Some of these factors are:

* Current phase of the hair cycle (Anagen, Catagen, Telogen)
* Fully grown hair length
* Hair growth rate (mm/day)

These are specific to each person.

On my arms, now the hair measures almost 4 cm at most. I waxed my arms 9 months ago, and I think about 1 month ago the hair reached maximum length. But, there is still room for hair growth as I observe it is getting darker as time passes. I think there is about %20 more to come.

If I shaved it would require 15 days less, and if I lasered then it would require 1 and a half months more to get to this amount of hair on my arms.

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#54991 - 08/15/08 07:47 PM Re: My LHR history (male) / Need help (Pics added) [Re: lagirl]