Laser Resurfacing
Laser Resurfacing
Dr. Loftus
InfoPlasticSurgery.com

Lasabrasion
Laser Treatments for Wrinkles
Laser resurfacing is one of the most common treatments used for wrinkles and acne scars today. Like many things in plastic surgery, laser resurfacing goes by several names: wrinkle laser, lasabrasion, laser peel, laser surgery, laser vaporization, laser desurfacing, and several others. All of these terms mean the same thing: they refer to the use of the laser to treat wrinkles and acne scarring.

Laser Resurfacing: The Good News
Laser surgery for wrinkles accomplishes improvement in wrinkles and acne scars. Some lasers (the CO2 and erbium) accomplish this by vaporizing superficial damaged skin cells and allowing the remaining collagen to become thicker and healthier. As a result, fine wrinkles will be removed and dynamic wrinkles will be improved (see Wrinkles for an explanation of dynamic and fine wrinkles). Acne scars will appear less obvious. The CO2 laser will also tighten your skin, smooth your skin texture, improve your complexion, and possibly your skin color. The N-Lite laser works by stimulating collagen production alone, rather than by vaporizing superficial skin cells.

Laser Resurfacing: The Bad News
Unfortunately, laser surgery is not a panacea. Your wrinkles and acne scars will improve but will not simply vanish, and several treatments may be required to achieve the result you desire. Also, (in spite of what you may have read elsewhere on the web), recovery from some laser procedures is not a snap (more below).

Laser Surgery: How and Why It Works
To understand why the laser works, you must first appreciate some basics about your wrinkles and acne scars. Wrinkles and acne scars share one very important feature: they are lower than the surrounding skin. Because of this, light casts shadows in them, making them visible. Look in the mirror to convince yourself. You will see that everywhere there is a wrinkle or acne scar, there is a shadow. If all wrinkles and acne scars were flush with the level of the skin, the eye would not see them because there would be no shadow. Laser resurfacing works because it makes the wrinkles (acne scars) less visible by vaporizing the surrounding skin (as in the case of CO2 and Erbium) and by stimulating collagen production which makes wrinkles less deep (as in the case of the CO2, Erbium, and N-Lite laser). Because your skin is vaporized (due to the CO2 or Erbium lasers), it is like a true burn. Your skin will be oozing and weeping. The deeper your wrinkles and acne scars, the more treatments you will need. Shallow wrinkles and scars may be vanished with one treatment.

The N-Lite laser is slightly different than the other two in several important ways. First, it does not actually vaporize away the top layer of the skin, so there is no open wound and no recovery period. You may put make-up on immediately and return to work. There is also no discomfort of the procedure, so you do not need to be anesthetized. N-Lite works by stimulating collagen formation within your skin, as opposed to CO2 and Erbium, which work by removing the older superficial skin layers.

Carbon Dioxide Vs. Erbium Laser Vs. N-Lite:
Which One is Right for You?
Choosing a laser is a very personalized decision and depends on how much improvement you want and how much recovery time you can afford. In general, carbon dioxide (CO2) laser resurfacing is generally more effective than Erbium and N-Lite (works better on deeper wrinkles and scars), but imposes far greater recovery (plan on 10-14 days with a bag over your head following CO2 laser). Erbium provides more modest improvement, but allows you to get back to work within a week. N-Lite offers less results, but has the huge advantage of imposing no recovery time. After N-Lite laser, you may put your make-up on and return to work immediately. Because N-lite imposes no recovery and is effective for wrinkle reduction in some people, it enjoyed a period of great popularity in 2000 and 2001. However, because ...





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