Alexanderr
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- #101
Yes, if the pandemic doesn’t further delay things, at least.and you say it’s looking good for around 2023?
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Yes, if the pandemic doesn’t further delay things, at least.and you say it’s looking good for around 2023?
5-6k not too bad as well. looking forward to ice blue eyes ngltbh nglYes, if the pandemic doesn’t further delay things, at least.
they both look like shit and would look better with darker eyes, only light skinned people like Meeks or Lima could benefitView attachment 760233View attachment 760235
You can look good with blue/green eyes if black.
With Asians, in particular East-Asians it’s a bit less likely.
In fact, I didn’t really manage to find any good ones on Google to post here.
Not that it matters that much anyway.
The procedure can also lighten your brown eyes to a lighter shade.
I disagree. The first guy is even notorious for his light eyes, most people think they look great. The notion only light skinned people can benefit from light eyes is utterly ridiculous.they both look like shit and would look better with darker eyes, only light skinned people like Meeks or Lima could benefit
This woman became a model due to a skin disease called vitiligo.I disagree. The first guy is even notorious for his light eyes, most people think they look great. The notion only light skinned people can benefit from light eyes is utterly ridiculous.
Aside from that, this black dude went from prison to becoming a model solely because of his eye.
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That’s not my argument, it was just an example of a black person benefiting from having light eyes.This woman became a model due to a skin disease called vitiligo.
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This is basically your argument.
Nah my point was that people with odd coloring often get hired as models, especially in these virtue signalling days. It's interesting that you want "evidence" when nobody from the selfhating stroma copers has ever provided any. A weird feature gets often complimented by virtue signallers but is there any evidence white women prefer blue eyes? I have never seen any and I have looked.That’s not my argument, it was just an example of a black person benefiting from having light eyes.
On that note, what is your argument for your opinion? Aside from saying they “look like shit” and would look better with darker eyes, you have not provided any.
Most people think black people with light eyes look great. Hence why celebrities like Michael Ealy get complimented on them so often.
You tell me what’s stopping black people from “benefiting“ when someone like Meeks, who’s half Black can.
No woman will compliment someone with dark brown eyes on how beautiful their eyes are. Your argument is weak.Nah my point was that people with odd coloring often get hired as models, especially in these virtue signalling days. It's interesting that you want "evidence" when nobody from the selfhating stroma copers has ever provided any. A weird feature gets often complimented by virtue signallers but is there any evidence white women prefer blue eyes? I have never seen any and I have looked.
Proof?No woman will compliment someone with dark brown eyes on how beautiful their eyes are. Your argument is weak.
I don't know. Sounds like you've been spewing anecdotes all along so I didn't care with providing anything other than a personal anecdote.Proof?
Odd coloring doesn’t necessarily equal bad coloring.Nah my point was that people with odd coloring often get hired as models, especially in these virtue signalling days.
Any positive statement presented without evidence be dismissed without evidence. You make a positive statement: “only light skinned people like Meeks or Lima could benefit” and then you provide evidence to support that statement.It's interesting that you want "evidence" when nobody from the selfhating stroma copers has ever provided any.
He hasn’t presented an iota of evidence.I don't know. Sounds like you've been spewing anecdotes all along so I didn't care with providing anything other than a personal anecdote.
Well you said "no woman" would ever so I thought you had some sort of data that would support it.I don't know. Sounds like you've been spewing anecdotes all along so I didn't care with providing anything other than a personal anecdote.
You so confidently claim only light skinned people can benefit from blue eyes, do you have any sort of data to support your statement?Well you said "no woman" would ever so I thought you had some sort of data that would support it.
I just go off what women on say and write.He hasn’t presented an iota of evidence.
Nah my point was that sometimes you can harmonize well with blue eyes and for these people blue is the best. Most people with brown eyes won't benefit from blue eyes and I'd go as far as to say it would be a major looksmin for many people.You so confidently claim only light skinned people can benefit from blue eyes, do you have any sort of data to support your statement?
Even if that were to be the case, this is an elective surgery. It should be down to whether or not you want a different eye color or not.I just go off what women on say and write.
They all write they think he is hot but his eyes are a big no-no.Smash or Pass: Toni Mahfud Artist
He's german of assyrian orgin (christian minorities from Iraq,Iran,turkey,syria)www.lipstickalley.com
Same thing on a Czech forum where women were asked to describe an ideal man. Most women didn't even mention eye color because it's extremely irrelevant but the ones who did, well:
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I am not stopping you from getting it lol. Do whatever you want.Even if that were to be the case, this is an elective surgery. It should be down to whether or not you want a different eye color or not.
This is very wrong. I have a brother and a dad with green eyes and both of them have always received compliments on their eyes, meanwhile no one has said a word about mine. We all have the same skintone so it's not about "brown-eyed people" not having "harmony" to get a different eye color.Nah my point was that sometimes you can harmonize well with blue eyes and for these people blue is the best. Most people with brown eyes won't benefit from blue eyes and I'd go as far as to say it would be a major looksmin for many people.
So, you‘re telling me, you read a few dozen posts on some forums and came to the conclusion women prefer brown eyes?I just go off what women on say and write.
They all write they think he is hot but his eyes are a big no-no.Smash or Pass: Toni Mahfud Artist
He's german of assyrian orgin (christian minorities from Iraq,Iran,turkey,syria)www.lipstickalley.com
Same thing on a Czech forum where women were asked to describe an ideal man. Most women didn't even mention eye color because it's extremely irrelevant but the ones who did, well:
View attachment 852920
Why are people with brown eyes incapable of benefiting from blue eyes?Nah my point was that sometimes you can harmonize well with blue eyes and for these people blue is the best. Most people with brown eyes won't benefit from blue eyes and I'd go as far as to say it would be a major looksmin for many people.
Yeah incels almost convinced me women only like blue eyes but it's just hard to believe a bunch of basement dwellers with anime pics in their avi when I have been reading the absolute opposite from women for years.So, you‘re telling me, you read a few dozen posts on some forums and came to the conclusion women prefer brown eyes?
Why are people with brown eyes incapable of benefiting from blue eyes?
Actually, why would light skinned people harmonize the best with blue eyes in the first place? I’m not saying you’re wrong necessarily, but I’d love for you to expand on your argument.
Contrast between hair color, skin color and eye color is usually regarded as a good thing, after all.
To claim women only like blue eyes with certainty is absurd but so is claiming people with brown eyes being incapable of benefiting from having light eyes and that only light skinned people could benefit from it.Yeah incels almost convinced me women only like blue eyes
That‘s fascinating since I’m convinced most people (at least here) would claim the exact opposite.I have been reading the absolute opposite from women for years.
I am not saying that dude. It's not black and white. What I said was that the examples you posted didn't seem appealing to me at all and I very much doubt their sex appeal is higher in any way. But that is just my opinion. Yours is different.To claim women only like blue eyes with certainty is absurd but so is claiming people with brown eyes being incapable of benefiting from having light eyes and that only light skinned people could benefit from it.
Which is actually contradictory, since there’s lots of light skinned people with brown eyes, which according to you are the only people who could benefit from blue eyes while at the same time being incapable of benefiting from them.
That’s ironic because your initial post was incredibly black and white.I am not saying that dude. It's not black and white.
You must have interpreted your initial post very differently then, because what I read was the following.What I said was that the examples you posted didn't seem appealing to me at all and I very much doubt their sex appeal is higher in any way. But that is just my opinion. Yours is different.
We wouldn't be having this argument right now if you made a somewhat sensible post originally but alright.they both look like shit and would look better with darker eyes, only light skinned people like Meeks or Lima could benefit
David Bowie maxxingWhat about people with dark brown/black eyes? Would they need more sessions to get blue or they will only get hazel/light brown eyes?
Is 5000$ for one session/one eye or both eyes?
What if i go broke and i got 1 brown eye and the other is half blue half brown jfl chernobyl mutations
They would need more sessions, I’ve asked them on their Facebook page however and they told me the treatments would most likely come out in packages to reduce the cost.What about people with dark brown/black eyes? Would they need more sessions to get blue or they will only get hazel/light brown eyes?
Is 5000$ for one session/one eye or both eyes?
What if i go broke and i got 1 brown eye and the other is half blue half brown jfl chernobyl mutations
I mean yeah but it’s up to the person to deal with that.Nice, the Only problem is: it's noticeable to everyone who knew you before that you had cosmetic work done
When did they say it‘ll be out next year? I’ve never seen them claim that, not once.i feel so bad for stroma copers, it's the same as "muh hairloss cure"
it's a pipe dream lmao they've been saying "it'll be out next year" since the 2016 lookism days jfl
I’m not sure, it’s too early too say, they did say they aim to keep all results natural and will therefore only treat both eyes but perhaps this will change in the future.@Alexanderr think something like this will be able to give green eye / blue eye heterochromia? alongside brown remainings near the iris like in the trials. honestly would die for something like that
INTRODUCTION
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I’ve been researching the company, its procedure, and the technology behind it for well over a year now and in that time frame, I’ve seen an increase in interest toward it. Coming with that, of course, a lot of questions and critique. With this thread, I intend to answer some frequently asked questions and address the commonly mentioned alternatives to STRŌMA in different countries.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- What is it?
- How does it work?
- Safety
- Early results
- All methods of eye color change
- Why get the procedure?
- Release date
- Presentation video by STRŌMA ® MEDICAL
- TLDR
WHAT IS IT?
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STRŌMA is essentially a laser procedure that changes your eye color from natural brown to natural hazel, lighter brown, grey, blue or green color. The number of treatments required to achieve your desired color depends on how dark the eye is preoperatively and how light the eye color you which to achieve is. The procedure is still in clinical trials.
HOW DOES IT WORK?
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In humans, iris pigmentation ranges from light brown to black, and, depending on how light scatters in the iris stroma through the Tyndall effect, the iris can appear blue, green, or hazel. Basically, under every brown eye is a blue or green appearing eye color in natural light. This is true regardless of race, ethnicity, or national origin.
The STRŌMA Laser procedure generates a low-energy laser beam that passes through the clear cornea of the eye and slightly heats the brown pigment on the front surface of the iris. This heating initiates a natural metabolic process whereby scavenger cells are dispatched through the bloodstream to the iris surface and gradually digest the pigment and remove it through the iris and bloodstream, revealing the natural underlying blue or green eye. The noninvasive surgical procedure combines eye mapping, eye tracking, and a frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser to capture, track, and change the color of the iris safely and effectively.
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MORE DETAILED EXPLANATION
SAFETY
It’s important to remember, no medical procedure is 100% safe 100% of the time. A person can be injured with a tongue depressor or a thermometer if used improperly. That being said, the procedure is undergoing clinical trials and has been, successful, for the last few years.
Getting STRŌMA should not increase your chances of developing eye-related cancers nor macular degeneration. It shouldn’t increase sensitivity to light either. Yes, people with light eyes are typically more sensitive to light than people with dark eyes, but this is not because of the color of their eyes. People with light eyes have less pigment on the front surface of their irises, but they also have less pigment throughout their eyes, including less pigment protecting the retinas in the backs of their eyes. As a result, these eyes are more sensitive to light than the more heavily pigmented retinas of people with dark eyes. STRŌMA does not remove pigment from or otherwise affect the retina, so it would not increase light sensitivity.
As for concerns regarding it blinding you... STRŌMA’s low energy laser only treats the iris (with high-accuracy). It does not enter the pupil or treat any portion of the inside of the eye, which is where important components of vision are located. Apart from that, the laser is weak enough to not affect your vision even if it did go over your pupil.
It is also important to note that the pigment is carried away by the vascular system after treatment, it is not released into the anterior chamber, where it could clog the trabecular meshwork, consequently increasing eye pressure.
The purpose of their formal clinical trials is to quantify the risk (and degree) of injury and modify the procedure to minimize such risks. STRŌMA has undertaken a detailed and protracted clinical trial process to ensure that any such risk from the procedure is minimized.
EARLY RESULTS
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Significant laboratory and animal testing were completed before the first-in-human trial of this technology. To date, 11 years of animal data and 7 years of human data have demonstrated the safety and effectiveness of the STRŌMA procedure.
In human trials, the clinical process involved treating superior (3 to 4 clock hours) segments at first, and then full irides as well as altering the energy applied to the iris to minimize adverse events and to help define key parameters of success. As greater energy was introduced into the eye, more iris pigment was released through the vasculature.
During the first-in-human evaluation of the procedure, conducted in November 2018 at two sites in Central America, 14 patients in Costa Rica and 20 patients in Panama received treatment in only a pie-shaped portion of the iris equivalent to 3 or 4 clock hours. A full-iris trial was completed in March 2019, with 30 patients receiving treatment of the whole iris.
View attachment 755299
What can be shared at this time is the excellent safety profile demonstrated in the 64 patients who have been treated so far. Each patient went through rigorous testing, including an external eye examination; dry eye assessment; visual acuity, color vision, and contrast sensitivity testing; retinal health assessment, including assessment for age-related macular degeneration; glaucoma testing, including IOP, iridocorneal angle, and trabecular meshwork pigmentation; OCT imaging; assessment of atrophy and transillumination defects; pupillary health assessment, including size, shape, and reactivity; and measurements of endothelial loss and damage, crystalline lens health, anterior chamber cell and flare, and treatment efficacy, including saturation and hue.
ALL METHODS OF EYE COLOR CHANGE
1. COLORED CONTACTS
View attachment 755318
Colored contact lenses provide temporary eye color change if and when they are worn. The advantages of colored contact lenses are that they: permit the user to test run various eye colors without any permanent commitment; do not require any surgical procedures, and can look natural if brown contact lenses are used to make blue or green eyes appear brown. The disadvantages of colored contact lenses are that they: can appear unnatural if blue or green contact lenses are used to make brown eyes appear blue or green; they provide only temporary color change; are poorly tolerated by about 50% of the population due to irritation and discomfort; may cause eye infections, corneal abrasions, and eye disorders; and because the size of the non-colored lens center is fixed, it does not dilate with the pupil of the eye, which can interfere with night vision.
2. COLORED IRIS IMPLANTS
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Colored iris implants are colored (brown, blue, or green) discs in the shape of an iris that is implanted through the cornea and sutured onto the iris surface. The advantages of colored iris implants are that they: provide permanent eye color change if not removed; and can look somewhat natural if brown implants are used to make blue or green eyes appear brown. The disadvantages of colored iris implants are that they: look highly unnatural if blue or green implants are used to make brown eyes appear blue or green; are extremely painful (according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology, and they can cause many serious eye disorders (e.g., elevated intraocular pressure, glaucoma, endothelial loss, decomposition of iris tissue, and even vision loss), and they often must be removed during the first year to preserve the patient’s vision.
3. CORNEAL PIGMENTATION
Corneal pigmentation involves injecting or tattooing pigments into the cornea to simulate a colored iris, creating a kind of colored contact lens embedded into the cornea. It’s idiotic and should be avoided.
4. LASER EYE COLOR CHANGE
View attachment 755304
Laser eye color change involves applying a laser beam to the iris of the eye to stimulate the removal of pigment from the iris surface and reveal the natural blue or green color lying beneath the pigment. The procedure was invented by STRŌMA’s founder, Dr. Gregg Homer, and his first patents were filed in early 2001 and his latest in 2020. The advantages of STRŌMA laser color change are that: it is surgically non-invasive; its effects should be permanent; it does not interfere with vision in dilated pupils; it creates a completely natural-looking blue, green, grey, hazel, or light brown iris (because it is a completely natural blue, green, grey, hazel, or light brown iris); it should be well-tolerated by patients; it should be pain-free, and it should be safe. The only disadvantage of STRŌMA laser color change so far is that it cannot reverse the color-change process by, for example, changing a green or blue eye into a brown eye.
Do note, however, that the description of laser eye color change above is specific to the STRŌMA procedure.
Since STRŌMA first announced its procedure in late 2011, several black market profiteers have emerged in Spain, Turkey, Argentina, and Mexico, and elsewhere. Most of these being mentioned here very frequently as a presumably better, cheaper alternative to STRŌMA. These black market operators use off-the-shelf lasers designed for unrelated procedures in an attempt to perform laser eye color change. Most of these lasers have not been clinically studied for safety or efficacy of eye color change, and to the best of my knowledge, none of them has been approved by any government agency for eye color change.
The STRŌMA laser was specifically designed and built for eye color change. It is a completely different device than the lasers used in the black markets. The STRŌMA laser produces a unique and proprietary laser beam that achieves better cosmetic outcomes, without posing a risk of injury to the eye. Whereas the black market laser beams are guided by hand, the Strōma laser beam is guided by high-speed mirrors, which in turn, are guided by a sophisticated and proprietary computer diagnostics program that moderates the energy, position, and focus of every laser spot. Whereas the black market lasers cannot detect sudden head or eye movement, the STRŌMA laser contains sophisticated and proprietary imaging systems to detect any such movement and interrupt or adjust the laser beam within fractions of a second. The STRŌMA detection system helps to ensure a safe and efficacious procedure every time.
Why even want light eyes?
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Well, light eyes are overwhelmingly preferred over dark eyes by men and women alike. They are associated with beauty, youth, and sometimes coldness. They provide a great contrast between your hair, eyebrows, skin, and eyes. Making them more captivating than their dark(er) counterparts. Another part of their appeal could be explained by their rarity, most humans on earth don’t have light eyes.
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RELEASE DATE
Sadly, there’s currently not a commercial release date available. The anticipated milestones trough commercial release as follows:
I think it’ll get released in late 2023 perhaps early 2024. The virus has significantly delayed progress, after all.
- Complete construction of initial commercial STRŌMA Laser System.
- Commence clinical trials with initial commercial STRŌMA Lasers on 150-200 patients among 3-4 international study centers.
- Secure regulatory approval of the initial commercial STRŌMA Laser System outside of the United States.
- Release STRŌMA Laser procedure outside the U.S. (e.g., European Union, Asia, Middle East, Canada, and Central and South America).
- Complete U.S. clinical trials for the STRŌMA Laser procedure.
- Release STRŌMA Laser procedure in the U.S.
PRESENTATION VIDEO BY STRŌMA ® MEDICAL‘S FOUNDER EXPLAINING THE PROCEDURE
TLDR:
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Under every brown eye is a blue or green appearing eye color in natural light. This is true regardless of race, ethnicity, or national origin.
The STRŌMA Laser procedure generates a low-energy laser beam that passes through the clear cornea of the eye and slightly heats the brown pigment on the front surface of the iris. This heating initiates a natural metabolic process whereby scavenger cells are dispatched through the bloodstream to the iris surface and gradually digest the pigment and remove it through the iris and bloodstream, revealing the natural underlying blue or green eyes.
US clinical trials of this technology are planned. And in the meantime, there is strong evidence from animal and international human studies to suggest that the Strōma treatment can safely, effectively, and permanently change iris color. The company has good multinational intellectual property coverage and a clear regulatory and clinical pathway.
These images are taken undder extremely bright lights.All the clinical trial patients results:
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Reminder: Most results will look odd with the iris containing a mixture of blue/brown pigment, since the patients have not received enough treatments yet. These are not the final results.
These are clinical trial results, but the fact they were able to safely remove pigment from the iris is the most important part.These images are taken undder extremely bright lights.
In normal daytime lighting the eyes are not blue at all, they are dark navy and dont look light coloured or create contrast, just look weird (navy eyes are not halo).
Its useless if you jave dak navy results.These are clinical trial results, but the fact they were able to safely remove pigment from the iris is the most important part.
We’ll see won’t we?Its useless if you jave dak navy results.
That’s because all results up until now have been clinical trial ones, where the area around the pupil has been specifically avoided and the patients haven’t had enough treatments, right before the virus hit they were waiting for approval to conduct more treatments.No 1 result has shown to give a blue colour like natura blue eyed people have.
Ive seen a guy who had it done cosmetically in Spain, he expected blue eyes and didnt like his navy results. In reguoar daylight pics his eyes looked dark as brown eyes.We’ll see won’t we?
That’s because all results up until now have been clinical trial ones, where the area around the pupil has been specifically avoided and the patients haven’t had enough treatments, right before the virus hit they were waiting for approval to conduct more treatments.
He probably got eyecos, or something. STRŌMA isn’t commercially released yet. I’ve addressed such companies in the thread though.Ive seen a guy who had it done cosmetically in Spain, he expected blue eyes and didnt like his navy results. In reguoar daylight pics his eyes looked dark as brown eyes.
don't get me wrong, I hope it's real too tbh but it doesn't seem likelyWhen did they say it‘ll be out next year? I’ve never seen them claim that, not once.
Instead of coming with blatant assumptions, do you have anything to suggest the technology would be incapable of changing one’s eye color? There‘s a plethora of evidence to suggest it’s possible and has been done before, there’s several pictures where a significant change in iris pigment is clearly visible.
They did only start releasing pictures around 2019, mostly because they‘ve only recently started conducting full iris clinical trials. They’ve had pictures from their partially treated iris trials since like 2015 but these were exclusive to investors, until an investor accidentally leaked one. This one in particular.Stroma is a scam company(they release few pictures every few years to lure investors, I have been hearing about their crap since 2014 and they only started releasing few pictures in 2020, that’s how scammy they’re
They delete every picture off their Facebook page every few months, as for the specific black girl you’re talking about, it’s very likely the picture of her they posted on their website was months into the future which is why her eye color changed. But in all honesty, I don’t know the exact picture you’re talking about so could you send it, so I can see?they even posted a black girl who did the laser in one eye made it blue on their page and then later deleted the picture but I had it saved screenshot and then later the cunts post it on their website and the blue eye became brown, they were photoshopping and claiming they performed the operation)
I’ve addressed the safety concerns of the procedure in the thread. I do think, however, that you’re mixing up STRŌMA with some other laser eye color change companies, as people frequently do.the final product won’t be released ever and it won’t ever be FDA approved due to extreme high risks involved in this procedure. Brb glaucoma, corneal damage leading to corneal transplant etc
Can even lead to blindness from high IOP and optic nerve damage
Why would the patients receive different results in different locations if the same laser is used in all locations? Do you have a source for anything you’re saying? Of course there’s risks involved, but as it stands, you’re exaggerating them.The only patients who have gotten somewhat good results have done it in Mexico but the risk for eyes is still there.
Not one of them visited an ophthalmologist to find out the extent of damage that had been done
Source for the documents? I’ve never come across those documents while doing research into the company. I do wonder though. Are you talking about STRŌMA or another laser eye company here?this is what these laser clinics make u sign
All companies that perform the eye color laser use the same type of laser which is YAG(they just have it set at different strengths)They did only start releasing pictures around 2019, mostly because they‘ve only recently started conducting full iris clinical trials. They’ve had pictures from their partially treated iris trials since like 2015 but these were exclusive to investors, until an investor accidentally leaked one. This one in particular.
They delete every picture off their Facebook page every few months, as for the specific black girl you’re talking about, it’s very likely the picture of her they posted on their website was months into the future which is why her eye color changed. But in all honesty, I don’t know the exact picture you’re talking about so could you send it, so I can see?
I’ve addressed the safety concerns of the procedure in the thread. I do think, however, that you’re mixing up STRŌMA with some other laser eye color change companies, as people frequently do.
In their own words, none of their patients have experienced anything you mentioned aside from 1 patient experiencing a slight increase in eye pressure. After which they increased the amount of procedures required to achieve the desired eye color since it decreases the chances of an increase in eye pressure. Unless I’ve been chatting shit and you can prove me wrong, of course.
Why would the patients receive different results in different locations if the same laser is used in all locations? Do you have a source for anything you’re saying? Of course there’s risks involved, but as it stands, you’re exaggerating them.
The purpose of their formal clinical trials is to quantify the risk (and degree) of injury and modify the procedure to minimize such risks.
Source for the documents? I’ve never come across those documents while doing research into the company. I do wonder though. Are you talking about STRŌMA or another laser eye company here?
Because as I read trough your post, I can’t help but think that you, like many others, are mixing them up here and there.
As I mentioned earlier in thread, ever since STRŌMA first announced its procedure in late 2011 several black market profiteers have emerged in Spain, Turkey, Argentina, and Mexico, and elsewhere. These black market operators use off-the-shelf lasers designed for unrelated procedures in an attempt to perform laser eye color change, vastly increasing the risks of glaucoma, optic nerve damage, corneal damage etc...
That’s not true. The STRŌMA laser was specifically designed and built for eye color change. It is a completely different device than the lasers used in the black markets. The STRŌMA laser produces a unique and proprietary laser beam that achieves better cosmetic outcomes, without posing a risk of injury to the eye. Whereas the black market laser beams are guided by hand, the Strōma laser beam is guided by high-speed mirrors, which in turn, are guided by a sophisticated and proprietary computer diagnostics program that moderates the energy, position, and focus of every laser spot. Whereas the black market lasers cannot detect sudden head or eye movement, the STRŌMA laser contains sophisticated and proprietary imaging systems to detect any such movement and interrupt or adjust the laser beam within fractions of a second. The company hasn’t even applied for FDA approval yet as its still in its clinical trial phase.technically stroma laser don’t work any different. They’re the same shit. It’s why fda won’t approve it. The risks associated with this procedure are too high.
From which company did he monitor patients? From STRŌMA or from another company?according to ophthalmologist Dr Francis Ferrari who has monitored some post op laser parients
He reported that patients who had done these procedures had epithelial cells of someone who was 60-70 in their eyes.
Ah, if you’re talking about that picture, I’ve seen it before. You’re right there is a difference, they probably, however, turned her eye brown again in the ”Before” picture to simulate how she looked before the procedures took place. It makes sense, doesn’t it? They wouldn’t post a before picture where she already has a blue eye, since the difference between the “Before” and “After” picture would be negligible if so.As for stroma making scam photoshopped pictures
Here’s the screenshot I saved when they posted the picture of the black girl on fb with one blue eye and the picture they posted on their website next year with brown eyes. This is the biggest proof that this company is a giant scam only looking for investors.
Nah, wouldn't happen because their maxillas and skulls are entirely different. They'd look pretty odd I think, almost like Albinos.lmao fast forward 20 yeras gooks are gonna transform into whites
get some skin changing procedure and indians too
STROMA themselves claimed that there's barely any risks or long-term side effects associated with this surgery. Of course no one here is gonna go get the surgery immediately once it's released and will most likely wait for legitimate testimonials beforehand. I have no doubt in my mind that it is more than likely safe, but I still would rather see the laser get tested on a larger batch of people.All companies that perform the eye color laser use the same type of laser which is YAG(they just have it set at different strengths)
These lasers work by burning the melanin in your eyes which is then taken away by our body’s natural healing method via the trabecular meshwork, there are chances of even a blockage occurring in the trabecular network.
Every single patient results in dark grey eyes. Baby blue eyes like James Bond cannot and will not be achieved with this laser.
according to ophthalmologist Dr Francis Ferrari who has monitored some post op laser parients
He reported that patients who had done these procedures had epithelial cells of someone who was 60-70 in their eyes.
technically stroma laser don’t work any different. They’re the same shit. It’s why fda won’t approve it. The risks associated with this procedure are too high.
The documents I posted belonged to the yeux clairs clinic of Mexico.
As for stroma making scam photoshopped pictures
Here’s the screenshot I saved when they posted the picture of the black girl on fb with one blue eye and the picture they posted on their website next year with brown eyes. This is the biggest proof that this company is a giant scam only looking for investors.
Playing with your eyes is no joke. Can literally go blind. See my previous posts #141 for the risks associated with the procedure.
risking your eyes for cosmetic purposes is not to be taken lightly. You can live as ugly but you cannot live as a blind person