Fortunately, it’s also a question with a pretty clear-cut answer. No,
laser hair removal does not cause cancer. We know this not only because there have been no confirmed cases since the treatment became widely available in mid 90s, but because the science suggests it isn’t possible to cause cancer by laser hair removal.
Why the Answer is No
Laser hair removal involves radiating an area of the body so that the hair follicles under the skin are burned and become inactive. You may have heard that laser hair removal is more effective on fair skin. That’s because darker skin absorbs more heat from the laser, making it harder to reach the follicles beneath the surface without burning the skin.
While the radiation is strong enough to damage hair follicles, it doesn’t carry the same amount of energy as cancer-causing radiation. In scientific terms, the radiation is
non-ionizing. If you want
the complete explanation, you can
look it up on Wikipedia, but the bottom line is that the radiation from
laser hair removal isn’t strong enough to damage your DNA.
In fact, if non-ionizing radiation did cause cancer, we’d all be in trouble because we’re surrounded by the stuff. Examples include visible light, radio waves, and ultraviolet light.
There are a lot of different reasons people get cancer, and many of them are beyond anyone’s control. Sometimes when people get sick, they look for something concrete to blame. Pointing at a relatively new treatment is a natural reaction, especially when you hear about so many products and medications that turn out to have nasty side effects.
But in the case of
laser hair technology, the workings of the procedure are pretty well known to science. There haven’t been any confirmed cases of
cancer caused by laser hair removal, and based on everything we know about non-ionizing radiation, there’s no reason to think it will cause cancer.
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