Laser
Useful for Severe Facial Acne
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 the University of
Texas School of Medicine in Houston, 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.
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