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Hair forms in a pouch-like structure below the skin
called a hair follicle. What we see as hair is actually the hair
shaft, which is the keratinized, hardened tissue that grows from this
follicle.
Humans
have more hair follicles per square inch of skin than most higher
primates, including chimpanzees and gorillas. Because most of this hair
is fine and pale (called vellus hair), it usually isn't visible
to the naked eye. Consider this: the forehead has more hair follicles
than any other part of the body. The thicker, fully pigmented hair most
people consider "real hair" is called terminal hair. This hair
is found on scalp, eyebrows, legs, backs, underarms, and genital areas.
This is the hair the Light Sheer diode laser treats.

Everyone's
hair grows differently, depending on age, weight, metabolism, hormones,
ethnicity, medications, and other factors. But all hair goes through
three distinct growth phases:
1) Active growth phase (called
the anagen phase), which lasts up to several years. At any given time,
the majority (85%) of our body hair is in this phase. During anagen,
the hair has an abundance of melanin.
2) Regressive phase (catagen
phase), which lasts about two weeks, during which the hair stops
growing but is not yet shed. About 3 - 4% of our body hair is in this
phase at any given time.
3) Resting phase (telogen phase), which
lasts 5 - 6 weeks, at the end of which the hair falls out and a new
hair begins to form. Approximately 10-13% of our body hair is in this
phase at any one time.
Continue to Hair
Growth-Page 2
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