Thursday, March 26, 2009

InGrown Hair - How To Remove Ingrown Hairs

The experience of an ingrown hair can range from a minor irritation to a very painful experience. When a hair curls under the skin rather than growing up through a pore, it becomes ingrown. Unsightly bumps, redness and irritation are common symptoms in individuals with ingrown hairs. Removing ingrown hairs correctly will help you gain control of your hair follicles. Clean the skin by washing with warm water and soap. Removing a hair that has ingrown will open up the pore, so you will want to make sure and cleanse the area of dirt and bacteria to avoid infection. Clean all around the site with hairs growing inwards.

Clean and purify the tweezers. You probably already have some irritation of the skin and stopping infection before it starts will be a top priority. It is good idea to sterilize your tweezers and this can be accomplished by soaking them in alcohol for a few minutes. Apply a warm cloth. Don't dig around for the hair if it hasn't broken the skin, unless it's infected. Apply a warm compress to the irritation for a minute or two. That should make the hair come loose from your skin. Cut the area to get the hair out. You should do this only if the skin is infected or bleeding or the hair can't be removed from the skin. With a sharp object, nick the area and let the hair come up from the follicle.

Straighten out the hair and extend it backwards. Avoid the temptation to remove the hair. If you pluck out your ingrown hair, it will have the same problems when the new hair grows. You will need to make the end stick out above your skin by uncurling the hair. Gently move the hair in the same direction as other hair is growing. Use hydrogen peroxide to sanitize the area. An ingrown hair under the skin once removed could lead to infection in the hair follicle evidenced by pus, blood or other signs. Make sure to keep the skin clean so that more ingrown hairs will not come about. You need to pour hydrogen peroxide on the follicle so that it cleans out the pores.

Ingrown hairs can be frustrating in hot and humid weather. When there are red dots on your body as a result of these, there is a way you can cure them. If you follow these tips, you will remove all your ingrown hair, and you won't get them again.

Laser Hair Removal - What To Choose Between Laser Hair Removal And IPL

Laser beams are a single wavelength of light. Medical lasers have been developed over the past 50 years, using different wavelengths to eliminate unwanted blemishes like broken capillaries, freckles, moles and age spots.

We now have lasers that target abnormal superficial blood vessels; lasers that target abnormal pigmentation; those that target the pigment in tattoos and lasers that remove water in the skin's surface to improve texture and reduce scarring.

Laser hair removal has been commercially available since the early 1990s. It has been known since the 1960s that lasers could weaken and destroy hair follicles, but it took many years to develop the technology that enabled lasers to target the hair follicle without burning the surrounding skin. A number of different lasers can be used for hair removal including alexandrite, diode and ND:yag lasers.

Alexandrite lasers (755nm) are acknowledged through numerous studies as one of the most effective for hair removal. The Candela alexandrite laser is particularly effective through its use of a built in cooling device which enables it to be safely used on darker skin types as well as Caucasian skins.

Intense Pulsed Light (IPL) devices generate an intense white light which is then filtered so that the ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths are removed.

When IPLs first became available, they were only used for treating blood vessels. Over the next few years, a number of other uses for IPL were found, including hair removal.

There was an expectation that IPL would supersede lasers. It was believed that one could filter IPL, to produce different wavelengths, making IPL a kind of pseudo laser.

After 10 years of experience with IPL, we now know that filtered IPL is not as precise as laser and that it is not possible to control the side effects of its multi-wavelength light. This is a good and a bad thing. The upside is that we have discovered other effective uses for IPL, like texture improvement and pigmentation.

IPL can even be helpful for controlling acne breakouts. The downside of IPL is that it is not very effective for hair removal. Also, its effects are not always predictable, even on relatively low power settings and it can be dangerous when used on darker skin types.

IPL burns tend to be deeper and frequently lead to loss of pigmentation in the burned skin.

There are many studies demonstrating that IPL is not as effective as laser for hair removal. If you are serious about hair removal, laser is a more specific treatment and has a better safety profile.

All Clearskincare Clinics use Candela alexandrite lasers, to deliver the safest and most effective laser hair removal treatments.

Laser Hair Removal - What Thing You Need To Keep In Mind Before Hoing For A Laser Hair Removal

Don't expect to find a surgeon in the same amount of time you found your last frying pan. Shopping for laser hair removal is time consuming and rightly so. You're looking for someone to make you look and feel better, and that's a job worth doing right. Skimp on the shopping process, and you may make a bad decision that actually costs more time (and money) than getting the job done right in the first place.

Factor the following time guzzlers into your total shopping time:

  • Laser Hair Removal specialist's availability: Depending upon your community or choice of specialist, you may have to wait several weeks for a consultation. Make sure you choose a laser hair removal specialist that is of top quality but he also has to have the time to see you for an initial consult.

  • Research: You'll spend roughly one to two hours in the office for every consultation. During this time, you talk with the specialist, fill out paperwork (of course), and talk with a patient coordinator about fees, scheduling, and any other general information you need. On top of that, you need to factor in your time to get there and back, which can vary widely depending on where you live.

  • Your schedule: Depending upon the laser hair removal specialist you choose, you may have to wait weeks or months for your procedure date. If you want the procedure within 30 days, there is no point in interviewing a doctor who doesn't have time available for three months. When you call for an appointment, ask about if the clinic is booked and how far out they are booked. If it's not a fit, ask if they can adjust their schedule to the date you want. Be clear that if they can't accommodate your schedule, you're going to have surgery with someone else. If they can't accommodate you, move along to the next name on your list or, if this is the surgeon you really want, adjust your time frame for surgery. You can also ask to be put on a waiting list for cancellations.

  • Recovery: Remember the old adage, "If you don't have time to do it right, when you will have time to do it over?". Even though most laser hair removal and laser tattoo removal procedures require little or no recovery time you may not know how your skin may react to this procedure, even though laser hair removal and laser acne treatment is overall safe and painless procedure your skin may prove to be more sensitive that others and you may be more comfortable in the confines of you home for a day or so while your skin heals.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Laser Hair Removal Tips

Welcome to laser hair removal tips blog.

We will be discussing various methods of laser hair removal treatment.

Whats involved in laser hair removal and how effective it can be?

Cost of laser surgery for hair removal

In general we will be taking on as to how you can get rid of unwanted hair from your body parts.