Electrolysis Machine Overview
The electrolysis machine was invented by an optometrist in the late 1800s. It remains one of the easiest and most efficient ways to remove hair permanently from the body. While there may be plenty of alternative hair removal methods on the market, most of them fail at even contesting the electrolysis machines ease and effectiveness. It has continuously faced scientific tests and still proven itself as a safe method of hair removal. As the name implies, its function and hair removal process revolves around the use of electricity.
The Process
The process starts with a needle. However, this electrical device is not simply any needle, but what scientists call a probe. This probe is inserted into the follicle that a hair grows from. The probe itself is extremely fine. It is so fine that it is smaller in diameter than any hair that it may be used on. Because it is so fine, there is little chance of pain or bleeding when it enters a hair follicle. This is partly due to the technician's skill and partly because the needle rarely comes in contact with nerves or blood cells under the top layer of skin. This makes the process of electrolysis a pain-free method of removing hair.
Hair Removal
Once the probe probe enters the hair follicle, an electric charge is released into the base of the follicle. The technician will then use a set of fine tweezers to grip the hair that was just charged and pull it free from the follicle. If the hair is still connected securely, more electrolysis sessions may be needed to sever the hair from the base of the follicle. If the hair is forcefully removed then the charge was not effective in severing the root base point of the hair and the electrolysis for that follicle will be considered a failure. The process is repeated for each hair.



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