Reading Time: <1 minuteSince the beginning of this year, many patients have been recommended MiraDry as an effective treatment for underarm odor, but have come to our clinic to ask about retreatment, as it has no effect at all. At our clinic, more than half of the patients who first visit for underarm odor treatment are ineffective or have recurrences after MiraDry. As I have mentioned many times in my blog, you cannot expect MiraDry to be effective against underarm odor. It is a lie that the treatment causes little pain, swelling, or downtime. Because it is a treatment that forcibly causes burns to the skin, severe pain and swelling appear for a relatively long period of time, and MiraDry causes overwhelmingly more pain and swelling than surgery. There is no end to underarm odor patients who are deceived by exaggerated and false advertising and receive MiraDry treatment. Of course, MiraDry has been recognized as effective for primary axillary hyperhidrosis, and there is no doubt that it is a medical device approved by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare for this disease name. There is a problem with nurses, not doctors, arbitrarily performing the treatment in cases outside of the indications and in areas outside of the indications, with profit as the priority. JMEC, a cosmetic medicine manufacturer that handles MiraDry, is a long-established and excellent manufacturer in the cosmetic medicine industry with a rich track record and actively holds research meetings and seminars. I have also served as a lecturer at and participated in JMEC's ​​seminars in the past, and learned a lot from them. It is impossible for JMEC, a leading cosmetic medicine company, to say that MiraDry is effective for underarm odor, which is not applicable, or to recommend that nurses perform the treatment. When the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare applied for medical device approval, the treatment should have been performed by a doctor, not a nurse. Why would a nurse with no knowledge or experience in underarm odor treatment be in charge of the treatment? I cannot understand. Treatment by a nurse is definitely a gray area and a major ethical problem. In particular, there have been cases recently where patients have died after undergoing treatment with MiraDry on areas that are not applicable or not applicable, resulting in serious infections due to skin necrosis caused by third-degree burns. Although it is assumed that a nurse will perform the treatment, the current situation is that in most cosmetic clinics in Japan, nurses, not doctors, perform MiraDry, and profit is prioritized. This is a frightening situation. I assume that Jaymec is probably also in a very difficult situation like this. Even though clinical trials are conducted, medical equipment certification is conducted, study sessions are held, and efforts are made to spread correct knowledge and technology, the emergence of beauty clinics that ignore risks and effectiveness and pursue profits only, just like exosome drips, has greatly reduced the quality of cosmetic medicine in Japan. I don't think exosomes are bad, and they may be a treatment with great potential. The problem is the act of beauty clinics that prioritize profit and ignore safety. MiraDry is not effective against body odor. At our clinic, we provide relief to patients who have fallen victim to the MiraDry body odor business. There is almost no pain, no downtime, and no scars, and you can get an impactful effect. As an EL law specialist, I will take responsibility and guarantee safety and effectiveness and carry out the treatment carefully. Would you like to receive body odor treatment from a nurse? Or would you like to receive it from a skilled specialist who is familiar with body odor? Please consider carefully. If you are suffering from body odor, breast odor, or hem odor, please feel free to contact us.