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How the LYMA Laser Won't Affect Facial Fat Deposits

How the LYMA Laser Won't Affect Facial Fat Deposits

How the Laser can sort fat in some parts of your body, and leave it alone in others.

Low level laser therapy has been proven to have a positive effect on contouring cellulite. But some customers have asked us: could the Laser affect areas of the face where I want to maintain plumpness?

Photobiomodulation is a powerful tool, which is why we've introduced it through the world’s most talked-about cosmetic laser. We’ve previously highlighted how low-level laser therapy (LLLT) can help sculpt and smooth areas prone to cellulite. However, this raises an intriguing question: if it tightens some areas of the body, like those affected by cellulite, could it also have the same effect on areas like the face, where maintaining volume and plumpness is key?

The short answer? No, it won't. The long answer? Read on below, documented in fantastic detail by leading craniofacial and plastic surgeon Dr Graeme Glass, LYMA Aesthetic Director.

Understanding the difference between cellulite and facial fat is vital

Facial aging is a much more complex process than simply the loss of fat volume, although this does play a part. Aging results in loss of stiffness of the skin through the loss of dermal collagen and the molecules within the dermis that hold water. Bone and fat within the fat pads of the face demonstrate reduced volume with age but more than just fat depletion, the skin network also becomes less vascular.

There is no evidence that the Laser accelerates this natural process. On the contrary, there is evidence to suggest it switches on some of the signals that cause tissue regeneration and repair, which are the opposite signals to those that bring about tissue aging.

When we look at cosmetic interventions to increase facial volume - such as the injection of fillers - the Laser can in fact benefit the results you're achieving from dermal fillers too.

It is important to understand that the fat of the facial fat pads behaves in a very different way to the highly metabolically active subcutaneous “white” fat that is a tissue of energy storage. While laser-induced release of stored fat products in the engorged “white” fat cells has been demonstrated, it should be clear that the loss of this fat is not associated with facial aging but rather with facial definition. In other word this is the fat that is removed during facial rejuvenation surgery to enhance the contours of the face and neck.

Therefore, that the use of the Laser might improve facial definition without causing facial aging.

Does the LYMA Laser remove fat or contour parts of the body that are not subcutaneous fat deposits/cellulite?

In different parts of the body, fat behaves in different ways.

There is evidence hypertrophied fat cells (fat cells enlarged by fat storage) release their stored fat when stimulated by the Laser. These are the fat cells found in storage sites such as the thighs and around the abdomen.

Under the influence of low level laser therapy, in these zones, engorged fat cells develop holes (pores) through which the stored fat products leak and are then filtered out of the spaces between cells by something called the lymphatic system and, ultimately back into circulation.

However, there’s absolutely no evidence that the Laser damages healthy fat cells or causes fat cells that are not enlarged by fat storage to shrink.

Are there other forms of fat deposit on the body, which aren’t cellulite, that the LYMA Laser is well placed to be able to tackle?

The term cellulite is used to denote the dimpling pattern produced by subcutaneous fat in areas with dense fibrous attachments between the dermis and underlying tissues. As the fat cells in these regions become larger with stored fat deposits, the areas between the fibrous attachments bulge. This effect is like that of a Chesterfield sofa.

Evidence suggests that red/near infrared laser light causes the formation of something called transitory pores in the fat cell membranes and the purging of stored fat products through these pores. This is especially true for the portion of subcutaneous fat that specialises in fat storage - in women this includes the hips and thighs, and the lower abdomen in men. So it is the fat cells that are important, not the dimpled appearance that we happen to call cellulite.

Are there other laser or light based treatments that do affect fat cells in the face?

There is no clear evidence on this. What we do know is that fat within the fat pads of the face behaves differently to the highly metabolically active fat that specialises in storing energy in the form of lipids found at the abdomen, hips, thigh and buttocks.

By contrast, the sub-muscular fat pads of the face pay important roles in the cushioning of blood vessels and nerves as well as providing support for the muscles of facial expression. They are not predominantly instruments of fat storage and therefore they are most likely not affected by laser light in the same way.

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