Hi Josie
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PMShe is using what she called flash but explained to me that it is the old galvanic type but with high current pulsed on short times.
Hm. In the circles I've moved in flash refers to flash thermolysis—which means no galvanic current whatsoever is used.
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PMShe inserts the probe and hits the trigger 3 or 4 times, then tries pulling the hair.
Again, where I move needle depth is sometimes adjusted between extremely short pulses to help locally damage more of the follicle while avoiding spreading damage wider to the surrounding tissue. Is that what she was doing?
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PM
Her probe looks like it has a ground electrode on it as well as the probe needle.
I've never seen a machine like that. What's the brand?
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PMIt does hurt a lot more than when she had me try the blend setting. Big difference is the blend took 5 seconds or so per hair where the flash took a couple seconds.
Again interesting. I know blend can take care of a hair in 5-6 seconds if the operator is skillful, but unless I'm totally mistaken, with flash the current should be on from just 0.1 to a maximum of 1 seconds. Since you say the time per hair was three to four seconds, I assume each pulse length was just under one second? (With the machines I know of galvanic takes between 30 and 60 seconds per hair.)
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PM
Anyway I assume she is right and it is galvanic since my pores started seeping and kept doing that a good day after. Guessing the sodium hydroxide causes this reaction. The next day my upper lip looked like I was stung by bees. Today it looks kinda bloody scabby.
The amount of lye generated in follicles treated using galvanic electrolysis is tiny, and I've not seen seepage continue for a day after treatment. Is your skin generally sensitive?
Quote from: josie76 on November 30, 2017, 03:06:39 PM
I've read some things saying the lye can kill the blood vessels for future folicules in that pore and it might eleimine multiple hair growth. Is that true at all.
In a sense, yes. All electrolysis destroys capillaries. However, they always regenerate. If the damage is extensive that takes longer, and hyperpigmentation may be evident until the healing process is complete.
The real points of interest where destruction is concerned are the papilla and the bulge. Lye spreads the damage within the follicle so it can destroy them even if the insertion point isn't exact. Blend heats up the lye to enhance the effect. The thermolysis/flash thermolysis/picoflash thermolysis modalities I'm familiar with depend on just heat without any lye. That's why I'm quite interested in what model/make of machine your electrologist uses.
By the way, were you holding some sort of a metal piece during treatment? That's something that you only need to do (and always need to) when being treated using galvanic or blend. When using any type of thermolysis it's not used (except in a rather special case which I very much doubt is relevant here.)
Do avoid disturbing the scabs. The congealed blood acts as scaffolding for tissue regeneration so it's best to let them drop on their own when the time is right.