THE FUTURE OF COLD THERAPY

WHERE THE SCIENCE OF COLD REACHES ITS HIGHEST EXPRESSION

Miami, FL — For decades, the application of cold to the face was underestimated and misunderstood. Not due to a lack of potential, but due to the absence of scientific rigor.

Today, Carolina Reyes — creator, inventor, and founder of CAAM — presents the only facial cryotherapy device developed after years of research, clinical observation, and collaboration with renowned dermatologists.

A former Colombian model, lawyer, and art collector based in Miami, Reyes has dedicated years to studying the real impact of controlled temperature on skin biology.

The result is CAAM: a piece of aesthetic engineering designed to apply cryotherapy in a precise, stable, and safe way.

Based on scientifically supported principles, CAAM promotes microcirculation, stimulates tissue oxygenation, and activates cellular processes associated with collagen production, skin elasticity, and dermal regeneration. Its patented technology maintains a constant temperature for approximately 15 minutes, preventing thermal shock and protecting vascular integrity.

More than a device, CAAM is a reinterpretation of cold: controlled, intelligent, and deeply effective. It works directly on the facial muscles, promoting visible toning without the need for invasive procedures.

"My purpose was clear: to transform cold into a precision tool. Where there was once improvisation, today there is science," says Reyes.

With an ergonomic design, anti-drip system, and refined aesthetic, CAAM positions itself as the new benchmark in contemporary facial cryotherapy.

What is now setting the trend across the United States and Latin America has a name: CAAM ICE FACE — precision facial cryotherapy.

The only device conceived under this scientific standard that is redefining the category — and everyone already knows it.

From Miami to the world, CAAM does not follow trends. It transcends them.