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Hydrolipoclasy

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The history of Hydrolipoclasy comes from the words hydro- (Ancient Greek: ὕδωρ "water"), lipo- (λίπος "fat"), and -clasy (κλάσις "breaking").

Modern esthetic medicine became a specialty around 25 years ago in France and today it is practiced by over 20,000 doctors around the world. Hydrolipoclasy was created in Italy in the 1980s, where the physic principals of sound and its amplification in watery environments to be able to produce a phenomenon known as “cavitations” in the tissue.

This substance dissolves intracellular fat, allowing this fat to be eliminated. This treatment consists in an application of certain medicine that is injected in the certain areas of the body where fat or cellulite is mostly stored, and afterwards an ultrasound is performed. The ultrasound and medicine combined produces a thermo genesis effect that burns up located fat when generating sound waves at a speed of 30 million times. This combination produces an explosion that loosens and ruptures these fat cells and eliminates them through the lymphatic and blood stream; it also breaks up fibrosis, which plays a very important role in the formation of cellulite. Hydrolipoclasy treatments can be combined with mesotherapy, where the focus id not only on the number but also the size of each fat cell, fomenting the reduction effect on the volume that is being treated.

References

  1. ^ Liddell, H.G. & Scott, R. (1940). A Greek-English Lexicon. revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones. with the assistance of. Roderick McKenzie. Oxford: Clarendon Press.


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