cosmetic plastic surgery : Laser useful for severe facial acne
Corrects story posted July 24, 2006. In Paragraph 4, corrects researcher's affiliation, which was erroneously stated in original version as the University of Texas School of Medicine in Houston.]
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Laser treatment can reduce inflammatory facial acne lesions with few side effects, new research shows. Moreover, it appears to work even with the darkest skin types.
The findings, which appear in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, are based on a study of 22 patients, with light to dark skin types, who underwent three treatments with the laser -- specifically a1450-nanometer diode laser -- at 3 to 4 week intervals.
The subjects received treatment at high or low doses on the left or the right side of the face, the report indicates.
After three treatments, average acne lesion counts were reduced by about 75% and 70% with the low and high dose treatment, respectively, Dr. Ming H. Jih, from DermSurgery Associates in Houston, Texas, and colleagues report. These reductions basically persisted at a 12-month follow-up examination.
Side effects were minimal -- typically transient redness and swelling -- and the procedure-related pain was well tolerated, the investigators note.
The results indicate that the laser is a safe and effective treatment for facial inflammatory acne vulgaris, the researchers conclude.
They say it is "a suitable first-line, second-line, or (add-on) treatment modality for moderate to severe acne."
SOURCE: Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, July 2006.
cosmetic plastic surgery
Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Laser treatment can reduce inflammatory facial acne lesions with few side effects, new research shows. Moreover, it appears to work even with the darkest skin types.
The findings, which appear in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, are based on a study of 22 patients, with light to dark skin types, who underwent three treatments with the laser -- specifically a1450-nanometer diode laser -- at 3 to 4 week intervals.
The subjects received treatment at high or low doses on the left or the right side of the face, the report indicates.
After three treatments, average acne lesion counts were reduced by about 75% and 70% with the low and high dose treatment, respectively, Dr. Ming H. Jih, from DermSurgery Associates in Houston, Texas, and colleagues report. These reductions basically persisted at a 12-month follow-up examination.
Side effects were minimal -- typically transient redness and swelling -- and the procedure-related pain was well tolerated, the investigators note.
The results indicate that the laser is a safe and effective treatment for facial inflammatory acne vulgaris, the researchers conclude.
They say it is "a suitable first-line, second-line, or (add-on) treatment modality for moderate to severe acne."
SOURCE: Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, July 2006.
cosmetic plastic surgery
Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
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