How to Use Your Luminous Pro Series

Five minutes.
A dark room.
A new relationship with your body.

Step 1: Charge Your Device

Fully charge before your first use via the included USB cable. A full charge ensures consistent brightness throughout your session.

Step 2: Find a Dark Room
 
A bathroom with a mirror works best. Turn off all lights and wait 1–2 minutes for your eyes to adjust. The darker the room, the clearer your view.

Step 3: Power On and Set Your Brightness

• Top button: Power on/off
• Middle button: Brightness (4 levels — start low, increase for denser tissue or larger breasts; Level 1 is often enough for implants)
• Bottom button: Timer (2 or 5 minutes)


Step 4: Begin Your Exam 
Hold the device gently against your skin — no pressure needed. Full contact activates full brightness. Move slowly using one of two patterns:

• Circular: outer edge inward toward the nipple
• Vertical strips: collarbone to ribcage, armpit to center


Don't skip the upper outer area toward your armpit or the high chest toward your shoulder.

Step 5: Repeat on the Other Side 

Complete the full pattern on both breasts every session.

A note on what you're seeingYou're building a personal visual baseline — a reference point that's uniquely yours. Regular use helps you notice if anything looks different over time. If you observe something that concerns you, bring it to your doctor.

Disclaimer (locked, use verbatim): Luminous Pro Series is not a diagnostic device. It is intended as an adjunct tool for breast health screening alongside clinical or self-examinations — not a replacement for regular screenings or physician visits. While abnormalities may appear as dark shadowed areas, 9 out of 10 tumors are non-cancerous. Any new or unusual breast change should always be evaluated by a healthcare professional.

DISCLAIMER (locked): Luminous Pro Series is not a diagnostic device. It is intended as an adjunct tool for breast health screening alongside clinical or self-examinations — not a replacement for regular screenings or physician visits. While abnormalities may appear as dark shadowed areas, 9 out of 10 tumors are non-cancerous. Any new or unusual breast change should always be evaluated by a healthcare professional.