1. Comparison of picosecond versus nanosecond Nd:YAG lasers for the removal of cosmetic tattoos in an animal model
- Author
-
Chuen-Lin Huang, Chia-Chen Wang, Yen-Sheng Wu, and Fur-Jiang Leu
- Subjects
Picosecond laser ,Materials science ,Tattooing ,business.industry ,Color shift ,Lasers, Solid-State ,Dermatology ,Nanosecond ,Tattoo ink ,Laser ,Rats ,law.invention ,Disease Models, Animal ,Animal model ,law ,Picosecond ,Animals ,In vitro study ,Ink ,Surgery ,Laser Therapy ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Abstract
Cosmetic tattoos are difficult to remove, and their response to picosecond laser treatment has seldom been investigated. We compared the efficacy and adverse effects of picosecond versus Q-switched lasers for the removal of cosmetic tattoos. White, flesh-colored, and brown inks were irradiated using 532/1064 nm picosecond and Q-switched Nd:YAG lasers, and their absorption spectra before and after laser irradiation were analyzed. Nine rats were tattooed with all three inks. Each tattoo was divided into three sections and treated at 1064 nm with a picosecond laser or Q-switched laser, or left untreated, in four sessions at 1-month intervals. Skin biopsies were taken from treated and untreated sites. In vitro study showed the 1064 nm picosecond laser caused the least paradoxical color shift. In vivo study showed that all white tattoos achieved poor response scores, six flesh-colored tattoos achieved fair to good response scores, and seven brown tattoos achieved good to excellent response scores with the picosecond laser. The picosecond laser was superior to the Q-switched laser for removing flesh-colored tattoos (P
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF