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§ The third pillar

Biologic Control.
Healing is part of the protocol.

Most laser systems treat what happens between sessions as the patient’s problem. The Precise System treats it as part of the architecture. Prep, recovery, and maintenance kits are engineered as clinical components — not retail skincare.

Fig. 01Biologic Control

§ Fig. 02

A protocol without biologic control is a plan without a patient.

The biology between sessions matters as much as the energy delivered during them. Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, delayed healing, paradoxical pigment shifts, complications that surface days or weeks after treatment — these are largely functions of skin state, not laser parameters.

Skin that arrives stressed, dehydrated, sun-damaged, or inflammatorily primed responds differently to identical parameters than skin that arrives stabilized. Skin that recovers inside an engineered regimen heals differently than skin left to recover on whatever the patient happens to have on the bathroom shelf.

Engineered biologic control turns recovery into a clinical input, not an afterthought. Practitioners are not selling skincare. They are administering a regimen that makes the protocol perform as designed.

§ Fig. 03

Three stages. One coordinated regimen.

Prep, recovery, and maintenance are not separable products. They are stages of a single regimen, coordinated to the protocol the practitioner is running. Removing any stage breaks the chain.

Fig. 03A · Prep

Prep

Skin preparation in the days before treatment. Hydration, barrier reinforcement, and pigment stabilization to reduce treatment-day complication risk.

  • Barrier-supporting cleanser
  • Hydrating serum
  • Pigment-stabilizing complex
  • Broad-spectrum mineral SPF
Fig. 03B · Recovery

Recovery

Post-treatment regimen calibrated to the specific protocol. Inflammation control, barrier repair, and pigment stabilization in the critical 72 hours after treatment.

  • Anti-inflammatory recovery balm
  • Barrier-repair serum
  • Cooling hydration mist
  • Post-treatment SPF protocol
Fig. 03C · Maintenance

Maintenance

Ongoing skin support between sessions and after the treatment series completes. Maintains pigment uniformity and prepares skin for future sessions.

  • Daily barrier-support routine
  • Pigment-uniformity serum
  • Long-wear retinoid (protocol-specific)
  • Year-round mineral SPF

Kit contents above are representative. Specific formulations and inclusions are calibrated per protocol and updated as the library evolves.

§ Fig. 04

The skin types the industry treated as edge cases were the cases we engineered for first.

Most laser-paired skincare on the market was formulated against a Fitzpatrick I–II baseline and adjusted for darker skin types as a downstream concern. The result is regimens that perform well on the patients they were designed for and unpredictably on everyone else.

The Precise biologic control kits were formulated specifically for Fitzpatrick I–VI tolerance from the first patch test. Active concentrations, pH ranges, and inactive ingredient selection were calibrated against the full skin-type spectrum — not adapted from a lighter-skin baseline.

The result is regimens whose performance does not degrade as Fitzpatrick increases. Same kit. Same expected response. Calibrated for the patients the industry has historically had the hardest time serving.

See the regimen in context.

Biologic control is engineered into every protocol in the Precise System library. A demonstration walks through how the kits coordinate with the protocols and the device.