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Fractional deep dermal ablation induces tissue tightening.

Authors :
Rahman, Zakia
Rahman, Zakia
MacFalls, Heather
Jiang, Kerrie
Chan, Kin F
Kelly, Kristen
Tournas, Joshua
Stumpp, Oliver F
Bedi, Vikramaditya
Zachary, Christopher
Rahman, Zakia
Rahman, Zakia
MacFalls, Heather
Jiang, Kerrie
Chan, Kin F
Kelly, Kristen
Tournas, Joshua
Stumpp, Oliver F
Bedi, Vikramaditya
Zachary, Christopher
Source :
Lasers in surgery and medicine; vol 41, iss 2, 78-86; 0196-8092
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Background and objectiveDue to the significant risk profile associated with traditional ablative resurfacing, a safer and less invasive treatment approach known as fractional deep dermal ablation (FDDA) was recently developed. We report the results of the first clinical investigation of this modality for treatment of photodamaged skin.Study design/materials and methodsTwenty-four subjects received treatments on the inner forearm with a prototype fractional CO(2) laser device (Reliant Technologies Inc., Mountain View, CA) at settings of 5-40 mJ/MTZ and 400 MTZ/cm(2). Clinical and histological effects were assessed by study investigators 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months following treatment. Thirty subjects were then enrolled in a multi-center study for treatment of photodamage using the same device. Subjects received 1-2 treatments on the face and neck, with energies ranging from 10 to 40 mJ/MTZ and densities ranging from 400 to 1,200 MTZ/cm(2). Study investigators assessed severity of post-treatment responses during follow-up visits 48 hours, 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months following treatment. Using a standard quartile improvement scale (0-4), subjects and investigators assessed improvement in rhytides, pigmentation, texture, laxity and overall appearance 1 and 3 months post-treatment.ResultsClinical and histologic results demonstrated that fractional delivery of a 10,600 nm CO(2) laser source offers an improved safety profile with respect to traditional ablative resurfacing, while still effectively resurfacing epidermal and dermal tissue. Forearm and facial treatments were well-tolerated with no serious adverse events observed. Eighty-three percent of subjects exhibited moderate or better overall improvement (50-100%), according to study investigator quartile scoring.ConclusionsFDDA treatment is a safe and promising new approach for resurfacing of epidermal and deep dermal tissue targets.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Lasers in surgery and medicine; vol 41, iss 2, 78-86; 0196-8092
Notes :
application/pdf, Lasers in surgery and medicine vol 41, iss 2, 78-86 0196-8092
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367438674
Document Type :
Electronic Resource