Laser skin resurfacing
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Frontline Medical Communications, Inc. in Seminars in Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery
- Vol. 15 (3) , 177-188
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s1085-5629(96)80009-5
Abstract
There has always been interest in looking younger, but recently there seems to have been an explosion of public interest in facial rejuvenation. Physicians have been treating photodamaged skin for many years by removing the epidermis and a variable thickness of dermis with dermabrasion or chemical peels, with the expectation that reepithialization and collagen remodeling will result in a more youthful appearance. With the recent development of short-pulsed high-peak power and rapidly scanned carbon dioxide (CO2) lasers, the ability to remove photodamaged skin in a precise and reproducible manner while leaving behind a narrow zone of thermal damage has been achieved. This development has generated tremendous interest in laser skin resurfacing as a technique to reverse photoaging.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Animal Study of Skin Resurfacing Using the Ultrapulse Carbon Dioxide LaserAnnals of Plastic Surgery, 1995
- Advances in carbon dioxide laser surgeryClinics in Dermatology, 1995
- Effect of the dynamic optical properties of water on midinfrared laser ablationLasers in Surgery and Medicine, 1994
- Laser therapy of verrucous epidermal naeviClinical and Experimental Dermatology, 1993
- Comparison of CO2 laser and electrosurgery in the treatment of rhinophymaJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1988
- Superpulse CO2 laser treatment of facial syringomataLasers in Surgery and Medicine, 1987
- Atypical keloids after dermabrasion of patients taking isotretinoinJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1986
- The efficacy of the CO2 laser in the sterilization of skin seeded with bacteria: Survival at the skin surface and in the plume emissionsThe Laryngoscope, 1985
- Selective Photothermolysis: Precise Microsurgery by Selective Absorption of Pulsed RadiationScience, 1983
- Effect of CO2 laser on skin lymphaticsLangenbecks Archives Of Surgery, 1980