
Non-Medical Thermocoagulation
Achieve flawless skin with non-medical thermocoagulation!
Thermocoagulation: What is it?
Non-medical thermocoagulation is a method used to eliminate circulatory anomalies and skin irregularities using a high-frequency, ultra-rapid current. This precise and meticulous technique is employed to coagulate certain superficial skin imperfections, reducing their appearance or eliminating them entirely. Thermocoagulation involves depositing a thin filament onto the surface of the skin without piercing, providing a heat effect that efficiently and almost painlessly destroys skin irregularities.
After the treatment, small crusts form on the skin’s surface, which should not be removed to avoid marking the skin. They will fall off naturally within 3 to 21 days. A period of 8 weeks is necessary for the complete healing of your skin.
Thermocoagulation can address small circulatory anomalies as well as those related to pigmentation:
- Ruby points
- Telangiectasias
- Star angiomas (dilated capillaries in a star shape)
- Skin tags (acrochordons)
- Milia (superficial epidermal cysts filled with sebum).




Thermocoagulation: What is it?
Non-medical thermocoagulation is a method used to eliminate circulatory anomalies and skin irregularities using a high-frequency, ultra-rapid current. This precise and meticulous technique is employed to coagulate certain superficial skin imperfections, reducing their appearance or eliminating them entirely. Thermocoagulation involves depositing a thin filament onto the surface of the skin without piercing, providing a heat effect that efficiently and almost painlessly destroys skin irregularities.
After the treatment, small crusts form on the skin’s surface, which should not be removed to avoid marking the skin. They will fall off naturally within 3 to 21 days. A period of 8 weeks is necessary for the complete healing of your skin.
Thermocoagulation can address small circulatory anomalies as well as those related to pigmentation:
- Ruby points
- Telangiectasias
- Star angiomas (dilated capillaries in a star shape)
- Skin tags (acrochordons)
- Milia (superficial epidermal cysts filled with sebum).



