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Yes - we've treated patients with Ultherapy successfully that have MS and other conditions.
Ultherapy is a non-invasive treatment for lifting the face and neck. You may want to consult with your neurologist to see if this is a good idea for you. Good Luck!
I would say for sure that there are not enough MS patients seeking Ultherapy and therefore there is no pubblished scientific manuscripts that recommend patient to have it or not to have the procedure. However, we do not know that MS patients can have sensory nerve issues - pain, sensitivity, numbness, tingling or prickling, burning sensation and therefore I would venture to guess that a procedure like this may cause you to have more of these symptoms in your face and therefore you should probably not have it.
It depends. If the upper arms are a little loose, with loose skin and not fat, then Ultherapy is worth a shot for skin tightening. But, if there is looseness and some fat, you need to tighten and lose the fat. Ultherapy won’t do that. Here you have some choices, you could choose laser lipo or a...
Neuropraxia following Ultherapy is rare and anatomically most likely near the jaw or jaw line treatment lines especially in thin people. Excessive pain in the jaw during the treatment indicates that this may be occuring and settings should be reduced to prevent this problem. Steroids can be...
Results from Ultherapy take about 3 months to fully develop, and it is unlikely that your home use devices will have an adverse effect. Interesting to hear that your Palovia was more painful! I just had Ultherapy last week using the new settings and there was almost no discomfort.
Fractional laser is an amazing and highly effective treatment in our office. We use the laser treatment to help with acne scars, large pores, fine wrinkles, tissue collagen loss, scars, sebaceous hyperplasia, active acne, and for brightening dark pigmentation. Although there are very strong...
This is absolutely true. the only practitioners that will say it is not are #1 in bed with the company and #2 are usually outside of the field of plastic and reconstructive surgery so patients with complications never come back to them and they never know about the horrible results that they...
It is not necessarily "normal" to have redness or small areas that look burned after an Ultherapy treatment, but it can definitely happen. Most of the time they resolve within a week or so on their own (like yours did) and you do not need to worry about them.