"I love trying anything that makes you look and feel youthful," Kim explained.
So, what exactly does a vampire or "blood facial" entail?
A large needle drew blood from her arm before the sample was spun in a machine to remove the platelets. The blood was then splattered into Kim's face using nine tiny little acupuncture-style needles.
But first she had to slap on some numbing cream in a bid to ease the pain.
The results left her looking like she had been in the classic horror flick - or a car crash, with blood spots all over face.
'It stings a little,' the medic who administered the treatment warned.
The treatment is so-called because it uses the patient's own blood to make improvements to the skin.
The plasma from the blood is then extracted and used in the non-invasive procedure, with the aim of rejuvenating the skin.
The technique is an updated version of the traditional 'vampire facelift', which involves a series of painful injections into the face.
Kim even yelled out in pain during the process.
"Oh my God. I will never get a facelift if it feels like that," she later exclaimed.
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