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Erases Wrinkles With No Down-Time At Work
| New
Minimalist Procedures are
Too busy to do more than put cream on those wrinkles you see
in the mirror? Lunchtime lasers are the latest breakthrough in cosmetic
laser surgery. The 15-minute "minimalist" procedure leaves no trace
and gets you back to work with no downtime. |
The goal is the same: to promote new growth of collagen.
Collagen, the biological equivalent of cement, gives the skin structure. When
collagen breaks down as you age, the skin begins to sag, wrinkle and discolor.
The breakthroughs in laser surgery are the result of studies on collagen rejuvenation.
Lab studies on women receiving the new "minimalist" procedures have demonstrated
that collagen renewal is virtually the same as experienced with the older more
invasive methods.
The new "minimalist" procedures are faster and less traumatic to the skin, and
the results are comparable to older more aggressive forms of surgery. Those
methods took more than an hour to perform and put patients into a week's seclusion.
Even after a week of healing, women covered burned spots with heavy makeup for
two to six months.
In the new procedures, the surface of the skin remains unaffected. The chances
of infection or other complications, such as scarring or uneven skin tone, are
negligible.
This is how it works:
CoolTouch™
uses a spurt of cryogen for analgesia and skin protection coupled with a pulse
of laser energy delivered selectively to treat subsurface layers of skin without
a burn.
Typically, one treatment a month for three to six months improves wrinkles and
acne scars.
Photorejuvenation is a light-based technology similar to the laser.
It uses Intense Pulsed Light (IPL), delivered through short and long wave length
filters, to penetrate the outer layers of skin to different tissue depths selectively.
This light-based technology treats vascular redness, pigmented brown spots,
collagen erosion and sun damage all at once. Its use is not limited to the face;
it can be used on the neck, chest and hands, too.
Photorejuvenation is typically done in a series of five treatments spaced three
weeks apart.
The popularity of laser skin resurfacing is clear: More than 150,000 procedures
were performed in the U.S. in 1998. Interest is expected to soar in the next
few years as 20-somethings and aging baby boomers realize how easy it is to
do.
No pain, no wound and low cost combine to make the idea of erasing imperfections
more agreeable than ever.
David J. Goldberg, M.D. (www.drdavidgoldberg.com) is Dermatologic Surgery at New Jersey Medical School and Director of Skin Laser & Surgery Specialists of New York & New Jersey. He is past President of the American Society for Laser Medicine & Surgery. Dr. Goldberg was voted "one of the top ten laser surgeons in the U.S. " by Self Magazine and " one of the best doctors in America" by Woodward/White, Inc.
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