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Ablative fractional laser treatment for hypertrophic scars: comparison between Er:YAG and CO2 fractional lasers

Authors
Choi, Jae EunOh, Ga NaKim, Jong YeobSeo, Soo HongAhn, Hyo HyunKye, Young Chul
Issue Date
8월-2014
Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
hypertrophic scars; laser treatment; fractional photothermolysis; ablative fractional photothermolysis; nonablative fractional photothermolysis
Citation
JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGICAL TREATMENT, v.25, no.4, pp.299 - 303
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGICAL TREATMENT
Volume
25
Number
4
Start Page
299
End Page
303
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/97782
DOI
10.3109/09546634.2013.782090
ISSN
0954-6634
Abstract
Background: Nonablative fractional photothermolysis has been reported to show early promise in the treatment of hypertrophic scars, but there are few reports on ablative fractional photothermolysis for the treatment of hypertrophic scars. Aim: To evaluate and compare the efficacy and safety of Er: YAG fractional laser (EYFL) and CO2 fractional laser (CO2FL) for treatment of hypertrophic scars. Methods: Thirteen patients with hypertrophic scars were treated with 2,940 nm EYFL, and ten were treated with 10,600 nm CO2FL. An independent physician evaluator assessed the treatment outcomes using Vancouver scar scale (VSS) and 5-point grading scale (grade 0, no improvement; grade 1, 1-25%; grade 2, 26-50%; grade 3, 51-75%; grade 4, 76-100% improvement). Patients are queried about their subjective satisfaction with the treatment outcomes. Results: After the final treatment, average percentage changes of VSS were 28.2% for EYFL and 49.8% for CO2FL. Improvement was evident in terms of pliability, while insignificant in terms of vascularity and pigmentation. Based on physician's global assessment, mean grade of 1.8 for EYFL and 2.7 for CO2FL was achieved. Patient's subjective satisfaction scores paralleled the physician's objective evaluation. Conclusion: CO2FL is a potentially effective and safe modality for the treatment of hypertrophic scars, particularly in terms of pliability.
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