Laser Hair Removal
Hair removal technology also continues to advance; many dermatology patients can have unwanted hair removed using special lasers.
Laser Removal isn’t for Everyone
This point is the most important one: You can’t use traditional laser technology on olive-toned or Black skin. Conventional lasers purposely attack dark pigment, leading to burning and scars; to treat darker skin, patients must seek Nd:YAG laser treatment. All other hair-removal lasers can blast dark hair on fair skin.
Unfortunately, no laser can remove blonde hair, and electrolysis isn’t a suitable alternative. Blonde patients seeking hair removal will need to wax or shave.
Laser Treatment Requires Patience
Typically, it takes a patient three treatments, five to eight weeks apart, before seeing results, but some may need as many as six to smooth a region. You’ll need more than one treatment because lasers damage the hair follicles’ stem cells, slowly thinning the hair, and it can take three or more sessions to destroy one hair cell. Many patients shave in between laser treatment appointments.
Some Areas Work Better Than Others
If your goal is to remove hair from your arms, underarms, legs, or bikini line, there’s good news: Those areas respond the best to hair-removing laser treatments thanks to the combination of thick hair and thin skin.
Other parts of the body where the hair is thin and skin is thicker, like the chin or back, are challenging to smooth.
Seasonal Treatments
Your first thought may be to schedule treatment in the summer so you’re set for the beach, but this plan is a bit misguided. As counterintuitive as it may sound, starting treatment in the fall or winter is your best bet. Remember how dangerous lasers are for dark skin? They’re just as dangerous for patients who already have a tan.
Always Go to a Clinic
Unlike cosmetic dermatologists, an aesthetician at a spa may not know to look for a skin infection or wart that lasers could spread. Likewise, a laser that hits a tattoo can cause burning, and even med-spas often don’t know to ask about recent sun exposure.