1. Minimally ablative resurfacing with the confluent 2,790 nm erbium:YSGG laser: a pilot study on safety and efficacy.
- Author
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Walgrave SE, Kist DA, Noyaner-Turley A, and Zelickson BD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biopsy, Cosmetic Techniques adverse effects, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Pilot Projects, Rejuvenation, Single-Blind Method, Skin pathology, Skin Aging, Cosmetic Techniques instrumentation, Dermatologic Surgical Procedures, Lasers, Solid-State adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: The 2,790 nm Er:YSGG wavelength has a lower water absorption coefficient than the 2,940 nm Er:YAG, but a higher coefficient than the 10,600 nm CO(2) laser. This allows ablative resurfacing with mild thermal coagulation, which may increase clinical efficacy while reducing patient downtime., Objectives: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of the confluent 2,790 nm Erbium:YSGG (Pearl™, Cutera) laser for facial rejuvenation., Study Design/materials and Methods: Eleven subjects (mean age 50, skin types I-III) with mild to moderate photodamage and wrinkles had two facial treatments with the 2,790 nm Er:YSGG laser using a fluence of 3.5 J/cm(2), pulse duration of 0.4 msecond, and 20% overlap. Treatments were performed 6 weeks apart. Pre-auricular biopsies from five subjects were evaluated at baseline and 6 weeks after the final treatment. Data from blinded photo assessments and subjects' self-assessment of improvement were analyzed 6 weeks after the final treatment. Additionally, long-term safety and efficacy were evaluated 2 years after the final treatment., Results: Histologically, 80% of subjects had new collagen formation in the dermal grenz zone, and 60% had increased epidermal thickness. Almost all subjects (91%) showed improvement in tone/texture, 82% of subjects showed improvement in dyschromia and fine lines, and 54% showed improvement in wrinkles 6 weeks after the final treatment. Subjects' self assessment indicated "significant" to "dramatic" improvement in dyschromia (91% of subjects) and tone/texture (82%) 6 weeks after the final treatment. All subjects saw "mild" to "significant" improvement in fine lines and wrinkles. At the 2-year follow-up visit, 57% of the overall improvement achieved at 6 weeks was maintained. No adverse events were reported throughout the study., Conclusion: Ablative resurfacing with the 2,790 nm Er:YSGG laser demonstrated visible improvement in photodamage with good tolerability and minimal downtime. Subjects were highly satisfied, especially with respect to dyschromia, skin tone, and texture., (Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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