Thursday, July 30, 2009

I have ingrown hair in face, and doctor wont remove?

i went to the doctors as previously i pulled a 3.5 inch hair from my face that had curled inside. I have it again, now 4 months later and he just gave me anti inflamitory antibiotics, he wont attempt to emove it or refer me? is this safe? i am concerned its gonna keep on growing, i dont know what to do? any advice anyone? i also have other problem, see my other question if you want to



I have ingrown hair in face, and doctor wont remove?

maybe you should see a dermatologist. and it is not unusual to get a second medical opinion these days, perhaps you should do that.



I have ingrown hair in face, and doctor wont remove?

Using a facial scrub once a week will help to keep ingrowing hairs at bay.



I have ingrown hair in face, and doctor wont remove?

have you looked into laser hair removal? its supposed to permenantly remove unwanted hairs...



I have ingrown hair in face, and doctor wont remove?

Not sure why the doctor wont remove it, maybe because of it's location. However, hear are some tips to helping treat and reduce the chances of getting them:



Avoid Unsightly and Painful Ingrown Hairs



Ingrown hairs (also called razor bumps) are unsightly and painful. They result when the shaved hair gets trapped inside the follicle or grows back into the skin. It can cause scarring, redness and swelling (its medical term is Pseudofolliculitis Barbae or PFB).



The comprehensive approach outlined here by my pals at *Menscience will solve the most stubborn conditions or occasional ingrown hairs. You will need to follow all four of the steps in this regimen for several weeks.



1. Treat with active ingredients



There are several products that claim to help treat ingrown hairs, but the reality is that Salicylic acid is the one active substance that can visibly improve razor bumps. It is a dermatological-grade ingredient that exfoliates, moisturizes, clears pores and can help prevent infection. Use a post-shave product with salicylic acid so it remains on your skin the whole day (see below).



Use only a non-acnegenic shaving cream specially formulated for sensitive skin, with lots of lubricating agents (foam-based shaving creams can dry and irritate your skin).



Do not use any product that has alcohol, it will seriously worsen ingrown hairs by drying the skin and closing the pores.



2. Improve your skin's surface



Exfoliating (removing the upper layers of dead skin) is indispensable to manage ingrown hairs. Daily use of a gentle face scrub with glycolic and salicylic acid is particularly effective.



Use a soft-bristle face brush and liquid cleanser in a circular motion on your beard to dislodge the tips of ingrown hairs, eliminate dead skin cells and clear follicles to allow hairs to surface unimpeded.



3. Adjust your shaving technique



Shaving too closely is one of the triggers for razor bumps. Hair stubs cut too closely will get trapped inside the hair follicle and dig inward or sideways. Don't worry, the disappearance of unsightly ingrown hairs will more than make up for the "five-o'clock shadow" appearance.



To avoid shaving too close, don't pull the skin when you shave; don't put too much pressure on the blades; shave with the grain and use a single-blade razor.



You will need to maintain this approach over time, as one extra-close shave will be enough to cause a recurrence of ingrown hairs that will take weeks to heal.



4. Treat already ingrown hairs



Carefully lift the ingrown end out with tweezers, but don't pluck the hair out; this will only make the hair regrow deeper.



Using products that contain azulene, allantoin and witch hazel will help reduce the redness and swelling

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