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Efficacy and Safety of Q-Switched 1064/532 Nm Nd:YAG Lasers on Benign Hypermelanosis in Dark-Skinned Individuals-A Preliminary Study

Overview
Journal J Clin Med
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2024 Mar 28
PMID 38541841
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Abstract

: Facial hypermelanosis is a major cosmetic issue that causes severe social embarrassment and psychological pain, particularly among Asians and dark-skinned individuals. : This study assesses the safety and effectiveness of Q-switched 1064/532 nm nanosecond/picosecond lasers in removing benign hypermelanosis in dark-skinned individuals, evaluating the possible associated side effects. : A total of 30 participants (80% females and 20% males) with Fitzpatrick skin types IV-V-VI who presented superficial benign hypermelanoses on the facial and décolleté area were enrolled. All patients underwent to one to two laser treatment sessions with a 1064/532 nm Q-switched laser system. Three months after the final laser session, results were assessed by comparing before- and after-treatment photos and using a quartile scale for lesion clearance (4-point Investigator Global Assessment scale). : All patients observed global improvements in their pigmented lesions: 53% of patients achieved excellent clearance, 30% of patients achieved good to moderate clearance, 10% of patients achieved slight clearance, and 7% of patients did not respond to the therapy. No serious adverse event occurred. Photos showed the clinical improvement achieved at 3 months follow-up. : The Q-switched 1064/532 nm laser proved to be a key tool for treating benign hypermelanosis in all skin types, including dark-skinned persons.

Citing Articles

Laser-Induced Koebner-Related Skin Reactions: A Clinical Overview.

Karampinis E, Georgopoulou K, Goudouras G, Lianou V, Kampra E, Roussaki Schulze A Medicina (Kaunas). 2024; 60(7).

PMID: 39064606 PMC: 11278978. DOI: 10.3390/medicina60071177.

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