The Efficacy and Safety of Ablative Fractional Resurfacing Using a 2,940-Nm Er:YAG Laser for Traumatic Scars in the Early Posttraumatic Period.
10.5999/aps.2012.39.3.232
- Author:
Sun Goo KIM
1
;
Eun Yeon KIM
;
Yu Jin KIM
;
Se Il LEE
Author Information
1. Seran Plastic Surgery Clinic, Incheon, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Laser therapy;
Erbium YAG lasers;
Wounds and injuries
- MeSH:
Aluminum;
Cicatrix;
Cosmetics;
Humans;
Lacerations;
Laser Therapy;
Lasers, Solid-State;
Patient Satisfaction;
Quality of Life;
Skin;
Yttrium
- From:Archives of Plastic Surgery
2012;39(3):232-237
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Skin injuries, such as lacerations due to trauma, are relatively common, and patients are very concerned about the resulting scars. Recently, the use of ablative and non-ablative lasers based on the fractional approach has been used to treat scars. In this study, the authors demonstrated the efficacy and safety of ablative fractional resurfacing (AFR) for traumatic scars using a 2,940-nm erbium: yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Er:YAG) laser for traumatic scars after primary repair during the early posttraumatic period. METHODS: Twelve patients with fifteen scars were enrolled. All had a history of facial laceration and primary repair by suturing on the day of trauma. Laser therapy was initiated at least 4 weeks after the primary repair. Each patient was treated four times at 1-month intervals with a fractional ablative 2,940-nm Er:YAG laser using the same parameters. Post-treatment evaluations were performed 1 month after the fourth treatment session. RESULTS: All 12 patients completed the study. After ablative fractional laser treatment, all treated portions of the scars showed improvements, as demonstrated by the Vancouver Scar Scale and the overall cosmetic scale as evaluated by 10 independent physicians, 10 independent non-physicians, and the patients themselves. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that ablative fractional Er:YAG laser treatment of scars reduces scars fairly according to both objective results and patient satisfaction rates. The authors suggest that early scar treatment using AFR can be one adjuvant scar management method for improving the quality of life of patients with traumatic scars.