Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Aesthetic Plastic Surgery 6/2004

01-12-2004

Neodymium: Yttrium-Aluminum-Garnet Long Impulse Laser for the Elimination of Superfluous Hair: Experiences and Considerations from 3 Years of Activity

Authors: G.A. Ferraro, M.D., Ph.D., A. Perrotta, M.D., F. Rossano, M.D., F. D’Andrea, M.D.

Published in: Aesthetic Plastic Surgery | Issue 6/2004

Login to get access

Abstract

This study examined the results obtained with a modern apparatus for laser hair removal (neodymium: yttrium-aluminum-garnet [Nd:YAG] laser at long impulses with a wave-length of 1,064 nm; Q-switched laser) over a follow-up period of 3 years. A large heterogeneous group of 480 patients was taken into consideration. These patients were treated according to a standard protocol with monthly checkups and a personalized protocol at deferred appointments. The results, discovered by means of the most objective procedure possible, were retrieved and put into a graph showing two different curves for the repopulation of hair. In their clinical travels, the authors observed an average variable regrowth of 40% to 65%, allowing them to affirm that laser hair removal using Nd:YAG at long impulses is decisively efficient in obtaining long-term results. The use of a protocol (denominated “prolonged monthly checkup”) with laser sessions at ever-decreasing periods permits, among other things, more outstanding and advantageous results for the patient. Thanks to more efficiently synchronized phases of the biologic hair cycle, this shortens and moves the telegenic phases closer and also renders the anagenic phases (those in which the selective photoermolysis on the pilipheric follicle proves to be efficient) more efficient. Personalization of the treatment relative to the monthly health checkup sessions is of fundamental importance to the scope of obtaining the best results in terms of cost–benefit rate, provided submassimal fluxes are (i.e., those well-tolerated by the patient) used. All this allows hair removal that is not definitive, but which becomes progressively permanent (i.e., characterized by ever-growing periods of lack of hair sustained by sporadic maintenance laser sessions based on the individual’s necessity).
Literature
1.
go back to reference Bencini, PL, Luci, A, Galimberti, M, Ferranti, G 1999Long-term epilation with long-pulsed Neodimium:YAG laserDermatol Surg25175178CrossRefPubMed Bencini, PL, Luci, A, Galimberti, M, Ferranti, G 1999Long-term epilation with long-pulsed Neodimium:YAG laserDermatol Surg25175178CrossRefPubMed
2.
go back to reference Kilmer, SL, Anderson, RR 1993Clinical use of the Q-switched ruby and Q-switched Nd:YAG (1,064 nm and 532 nm)lasers for treatment of tattoosJ Dermatol Surg Oncol19330PubMed Kilmer, SL, Anderson, RR 1993Clinical use of the Q-switched ruby and Q-switched Nd:YAG (1,064 nm and 532 nm)lasers for treatment of tattoosJ Dermatol Surg Oncol19330PubMed
3.
go back to reference Lin, TD, Manuskiatti, W, Dierickx, CC, Farinelli, W, Fischer, ME, Flotte, T, Baden, HP, Anderson, RR 1998Hair growth cycle affects hair follicle destruction by ruby laser pulsesJ Invest Dermatol111107113CrossRefPubMed Lin, TD, Manuskiatti, W, Dierickx, CC, Farinelli, W, Fischer, ME, Flotte, T, Baden, HP, Anderson, RR 1998Hair growth cycle affects hair follicle destruction by ruby laser pulsesJ Invest Dermatol111107113CrossRefPubMed
4.
5.
6.
go back to reference Wheeland, RG 1995Clinical uses of lasers in dermatologyLasers Surg Med162PubMed Wheeland, RG 1995Clinical uses of lasers in dermatologyLasers Surg Med162PubMed
7.
go back to reference Wimmershoff, MB, Scherer, K, Lorenz, S, Landthaler, M, Hohenleutner, U 2000Hair removal using a 5-msec long-pulsed ruby laserDermatol Surg26205209CrossRefPubMed Wimmershoff, MB, Scherer, K, Lorenz, S, Landthaler, M, Hohenleutner, U 2000Hair removal using a 5-msec long-pulsed ruby laserDermatol Surg26205209CrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
Neodymium: Yttrium-Aluminum-Garnet Long Impulse Laser for the Elimination of Superfluous Hair: Experiences and Considerations from 3 Years of Activity
Authors
G.A. Ferraro, M.D., Ph.D.
A. Perrotta, M.D.
F. Rossano, M.D.
F. D’Andrea, M.D.
Publication date
01-12-2004
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Aesthetic Plastic Surgery / Issue 6/2004
Print ISSN: 0364-216X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-5241
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00266-004-0013-9

Other articles of this Issue 6/2004

Aesthetic Plastic Surgery 6/2004 Go to the issue