-40%

1 inch Vitiligo treatment : Lamp and Psoralen phototherapy

$ 25.34

Availability: 47 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • Condition: New
  • Item must be returned within: 60 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Israel
  • Intended Use/Discipline: Dermatology
  • Brand: UVCLINIC
  • MPN: Does Not Apply
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    The kit
    re pigment
    spots of Vitiligo.
    The average time to cure is one month.
    If you have the spots more than 10 years and in the legs and hands it can take 2 months.
    Do not look directly at the lamp light.
    Wear sunglasses if you need to treat the face.
    Put one drop of the psoralen gel on the skin with vitiligo.
    Massage the gel 10 seconds with the supplied cotton stick.
    Do not let it reach the skin around the vitiligo.
    Clean the skin from the gel.
    Put the lamp touching the skin so that the light will fall on the skin.
    In the first day the time should be 10 seconds.
    Increase every day by 10 seconds until the skin will be little pink.
    The average time is 2 minutes but you must increase gradually to let the skin get used.
    The price includes:
    Usage instructions.
    Psora-Ora Psoralen 60ml.
    1 inch diameter h
    igh power
    PUVA lamp.
    Digital timer.
    From wikipedia:
    PUVA Vs. narrowband UVB therapy
    At the very least for vitiligo, narrowband ultraviolet B (UVB) nanometer phototherapy is now used more commonly than PUVA since it does not require the use of the psoralen. As with PUVA, treatment is carried out 2–3 times a week in a clinic or every day at home, and there is no need to use psoralen.
    Narrowband UVB therapy is less effective for the legs and hands, compared to the face and neck. To the hands and legs PUVA may be more effective. The reason can be because UVA penetrates deeper in the skin, and the melanocytes in the skin of the hands and legs are positioned deeper in the skin. Narrowband UVB 311 nanometer is blocked by the topmost skin layer, and UVA 365 nanometer reaches the melanocytes that are in the bottom skin layer.
    Melanin is a dark pigment of the skin and the melanocytes produce it. The melanocytes produce melanin when their receptors detect UV light. The purpose of the melanin is to block UV light so that it will not cause damage to the body cells under the skin.