How Laser Therapy Could Help Your Skin TroublesToo much hair? Too little hair? Brown spots?… +8 More
April 05, 2016
Health and Beauty Interviewer: What types of skin conditions can laser skin therapy treat? How does it work, and why you should have a dermatologist do the procedure? That's next on The Scope. Announcer: Health tips, medical news, research, and more for a happier, healthier life. From University of Utah Health Sciences, this is The Scope. Interviewer: Your skin protects you, and just like any other protective cover it takes damage from the sun, the wind, even pollution. The result a lot of times is fine lines, wrinkles, pigment problems on the face, acne scars, sun damage, the stuff you look in the mirror, you see, and you're like, "I wish that could go away." Well, you don't have to live with all those things. Dermatologists can use lasers to take up to five years off the skin by treating surface issues. We're with Dr. David Smart. He's a dermatologist with University of Utah Health Care. I want to learn more about your lasers and this skin therapy. So what are some of the common conditions that lasers can treat? Dr. Smart: Well, that's a great question. I think people don't quite realize, there are many different types of lasers, and different types of lasers treat many different skin conditions. I like to describe lasers as being a modality or a treatment to help normalize the skin. Meaning, when you have too much hair, lasers can remove it. When you have too little hair, lasers can help grow it back. If you have too many brown spots, lasers can help get rid of those brown spots. If you don't have enough, if you have some light spots, lasers can help bring back that color. So there are a variety of lasers that go after many different targets, and in the end they really help normalize or bring that skin back to health. Interviewer: That's pretty amazing. How long has this technology been around? Dr. Smart: It is quite recent in the grand scheme of medicine. In the last 20 or 30 years, there have been many really impressive, remarkable breakthroughs in laser medicine. Interviewer: So is it fair to say that if you have some sort of a skin issue that bothers you and you're thinking to yourself, "Oh, I wish I could do something about that," lasers might be able to offer a solution? Dr. Smart: There's a solution for that. It's certainly a possibility. Interviewer: All right. Get a little geeky for me here. Tell me how does a laser . . . What's going on? Like when the laser hits my skin, how is it fixing problems? Dr. Smart: Light. When we're dealing with the spectrum of light, not all light is the same. You've got a wide spectrum of light, and that light comes in different sizes. The sunlight is a specific size, and then you get into visible light, blue light, all the colors that you see, that's a different size. You get into ultraviolet, infrared. So there is a spectrum of light. On that spectrum of light, there are certain things that absorb different wavelengths of light with different sort of affinities, meaning, this brown spot, that's going to absorb this wavelength of light. But really, that other one is not going to even touch it. Fat cells absorb different wavelengths of light, color-making cells. Tattoo pigment absorbs different wavelengths of light. So what's happening is, depending on the medical condition that you have, someone who knows about laser medicine is choosing a specific wavelength of light, a specific type of laser to treat your condition, because your condition responds to a specific band of light. When that band of light hits that target, the light is absorbed preferentially by that target and not by the surrounding tissue so that that target can be effectively heat-damaged without damaging everything around it. Interviewer: When you say "that target," this is a cellular level? Dr. Smart: Yeah. We're talking real small. We're talking particles. Like the molecule that makes brown in your skin, that's a possible target. The molecule that makes red in your blood vessels, that's a target. Interviewer: So let's just take the molecule that makes brown. The laser hits it, then what happens to that? Dr. Smart: The laser hits it, and depending on what setting you've chosen on the laser, you're either warming it up or you're shaking it to the point of disruption or explosion, essentially. Interviewer: If you want to get rid of it, I would imagine you explode it. Dr. Smart: Explode it, exactly. Interviewer: If you want to make it more pronounced, you would warm it up. Dr. Smart: Yeah, precisely. You would warm it up slowly, and that decreases the inflammatory pathway around it. That can result in improvement in conditions like psoriasis, vitiligo which is a color problem, and even that's why hair loss seems to be helped with certain types of lasers. Interviewer: What about wrinkles? How are you getting rid of those wrinkles? Dr. Smart: That's a great question, and while we're geeking out about this the target that you use to get rid of wrinkles is actually water. So you deliver the laser energy at a very specific depth. So you're telling the laser how deep you want to go, and you're essentially exploding, or removing, or damaging all cells that have water, which is all cells, in them in a specific pattern at a specific depth. So when you've calculated that out, you are effectively controlling which skin you're removing and which skin you're leaving. Like aerating a lawn, the tool that you use is you really just cut it out. With the laser, the laser uses a wavelength that targets water and removes everything with water in that area so that the skin underneath can say, "Yeah. We are looking a little bit old. We are starting to get a little bit thin. We should rejuvenate this area," and the skin really does the rest. It's pretty remarkable that you cause the damage, the skin is what heals and cures itself. Interviewer: Oh, so you're intentionally damaging skin in order to motivate it. Dr. Smart: Force it to say, "Hey, step up to the plate here. Start working," and it does. Interviewer: Very cool. Tell me a little bit about using these lasers, because I think I've heard ads for a lot of organizations that might use lasers for skin treatment. You're a doctor, a physician, a dermatologist, this is your area of expertise. Do you receive some special training, or is there an advantage to coming to you to use this technology? Dr. Smart: Oh, you bet. So lasers were invented by dermatologists. Back on the East Coast, sort of the grandfathers of laser medicine are dermatologists out of Harvard, and they in fact own many of the companies back there that have created these layers to treat a variety of skin conditions. So there is specialty training both in residency, and there is specialty training in post-residency. For me, myself, I completed a laser and cosmetic fellowship, extra training after residency for over a year in Manhattan, and those kinds of things do exist. But they're just getting started, and mostly just in dermatology. Some very important issues, lasers are fairly powerful. Every now and again, more regularly than I'd like to see, a lot of people come in with complications that they've received at medi-spas, or somebody that decided they wanted to stop being whatever their profession was and start treating skin problems and call themselves a laser center. So you do have to watch out for that, because there is specialty training and not every laser is created the same. Some lasers are Ferraris and some lasers are the Kia Souls, the very cheap type of lasers. There are more side effects for the lasers that claim to do absolutely everything. And for people who are running them that really don't know the difference in how the chest skin is different from the face, and how the face skin is different from the scalp, what laser settings need to be used to treat those areas, and sometimes to the patient's detriment. Interviewer: I think the important thing to remember is you've got the technology, and then you need to have the skilled technician that understands how the technology works, how the skin works, how the body is different. Dr. Smart: Yeah, definitely. Interviewer: Are the treatments for the various skin conditions relatively the same, in so far as how many treatments you're going to need, how often you need to go in, how long it's going to take? Or does it vary quite a bit? Dr. Smart: It varies quite a bit. I'll use one specific example, and that's laser resurfacing. Laser resurfacing does a great job at, those lasers that you mentioned before, taking five years off the skin, those are resurfacing lasers. Interviewer: How do you take five years off the skin? What exactly is going on there? Dr. Smart: So like you said, skin takes a lot of the brunt of the damage, pollution, time, weather, sun, all of that, and it starts to get blotchy overtime. The pores start to get larger. The texture is not as smooth. It's more cobblestone-y, "crepe-y" we like to call it, a sort of fine paper type of appearance with a lot of wrinkles. Removing those things, normalizing the color, taking away the brown spots and the red spots, making it a smooth tone, and also smoothening out the texture, that's taking at least five years in many cases off the skin. Interviewer: It sounds like to do something like that, you're probably using a lot of different lasers. Like you've kind of got to mix and match for each patient that comes in, "What are the issues we're trying to solve?" Dr. Smart: Certainly. Interviewer: And put together a treatment regimen. Dr. Smart: Yeah. It's very, very personalized, which brings me back to that point before that not one laser is going to do all of these things. Some of the lasers actually do take quite a bit of time, a course of them. You are going to want to repeat some of these lasers four to six times. Some of the other lasers that have a little bit more bang right up front as far as their efficacy, they also have more downtime. So there are some lasers that are going to get you five years off the skin with just one treatment, but you're probably going to not want to leave the house for a week. You're going to be a little bit red. It's going to be apparent that you had something done for several weeks after that treatment. Whereas, some of the other lasers that do the same thing in a more conservative, more elegant fashion, they get you the same result, but it might take six months, nine months of repeating this laser treatment on a regular basis. But your downtime, much better. Interviewer: There again, that's where having somebody that really understands the skin and how these lasers work, and the best laser for the job. Are there side effects to these treatments? Twenty, 25 years down the road, am I going to have less skin now and I'm going to be more vulnerable to the elements? Dr. Smart: That's a great question. Surprisingly, no. To be totally fair, we haven't been doing these treatments on a very large scale for more than a few decades. So we don't have quite that much evidence. But going back to what I said, normalizing the skin, so the skin actually becomes healthier, stronger, and thicker with repeated laser treatments, rather than thinner and less skin. Interviewer: This is such a crude analogy. It's not like sandblasting? Dr. Smart: No, it's not like sandblasting. Interviewer: It actually makes the skin healthier. That's fascinating. Dr. Smart: Yeah. It's more like aerating a lawn, actually. You're removing certain places, but leaving healthy patches to grow in, fill in that area. Interviewer: Then, overtime it becomes a healthier lawn. Dr. Smart: It's even healthier, yeah. Interviewer: The skin becomes healthier with laser treatment as well. Dr. Smart: Precisely. Interviewer: Are there any side effects? You had mentioned that some treatments you might need to take a few days off, because somebody would be able to tell that something happened. Dr. Smart: Oh, yeah. Most definitely, and of course depending on the laser entirely. But laser energy is essentially, when it all boils down to it, heat. So burns are the most common side effect, burning, blistering, and most of the time you're trying to get a mild burn. You're going for a light sunburn appearance, because that's what the result is to show efficacy. You really do want to have some appearance that something's been done. Generally speaking, that can go away in anywhere from 30 minutes to a day, a few days, and that just depends on the laser you choose and what you're going after. Interviewer: What should a listener know to make an informed decision about this? I think we've covered a lot of the bases. Is there anything that I forgot? Dr. Smart: There are many different lasers, and there are many different problems, tattoos, scars, and a variety of medical treatments that can effectively be treated by laser. So you really just have to go somewhere that has some experience. Announcer: TheScopeRadio.com is University of Utah Health Sciences radio. If you like what you heard, be sure to get our latest content by following us on Facebook. Just click on the Facebook icon at TheScopeRadio.com. |
|
Does a Suntan Protect Against UV Rays?Does getting a rich golden-brown tan offer… +6 More
August 01, 2014
Cancer
Health and Beauty Interviewer: Suntans. Do they offer protection from skin cancer? We're going to examine that next on The Scope. Announcer: Medical news and research from University Utah physicians and specialists you can use for a happier and healthier life. You're listening to The Scope. Interviewer: We're with Dr. Doug Grossman. He's an expert in early diagnosis and treatment of skin cancer at Huntsman Cancer Institute. So I need this answer from a professional, from the guy that knows. I've always been under the impression if my skin starts tanning it's the natural response to the sunlight to let less sun in so that actually is giving me more protection. Is that accurate or not? Dr. Doug Grossman: Well it's true that the suntan is a natural response of the skin trying to protect itself from the damaging UV rays and so actually the UV exposure generates a signal response in cells in the skin that causes more pigment to be made and this ultimately does protect the skin and so if you do have a suntan then you're going to be more resistant to future sun burning. The problem is that you're also damaging the skin in this process and in fact the sunburn or suntan response is actually an indicator of damage to the DNA. What happens is the UV rays interact with the DNA and initiate this response that signals the cells to make more pigment but it's actually a reflection of that damage that you're incurring. And so even after a few weeks if the sunburn, the tan has resolved, that damage has still been done. And it can accumulate and persist for many years. Interviewer: So gradually building up my suntan to prevent skin cancer, it could prevent a sunburn. Dr. Doug Grossman: Right. Interviewer: But the damage is still happening to the skin that could cause skin cancer. I'm getting no protection from it from what I understand. Is that correct? Dr. Doug Grossman: Right. That's correct. Interviewer: So what does that mean? Dr. Doug Grossman: The tan is going to protect you against some future UV exposure but it would be better to not incur that exposure and damage in the first place. Interviewer: And also, like wear long sleeves or wear some sort of a sunblock or something of that nature would be much better, right? Dr. Doug Grossman: Right. Well, I tell patients if they want to have a tan and look tan the safe way to do that is to apply topical products or a spray tan and they can look quite realistic and that's totally safe. Artificial tanning in that way doesn't provide any protection against future exposure but that's the safe way to look tan. We really discourage patients from using tanning booths. We know that tanning booths increases skin cancer risk, it at least doubles melanoma risk and so we definitely discourage that. Interviewer: I seem to remember at a tanning place one time the guy was telling me, "Oh no, this is okay because the damaging rays aren't in the suntan booth." Dr. Doug Grossman: Well, generally in the tanning booths they use longer UV wavelengths that are lower energy so it doesn't cause sunburn but does initiate the tanning response and you get delayed tanning. Interviewer: Which goes right back to what you said earlier is that that's an indication that you're getting cell damage. Dr. Doug Grossman: Correct. Interviewer: And that cell damage, so we all love our tan so much let's get into this cell damage a little bit more because I feel as though maybe if people heard what's really going on and how damaging it can be they might, you know, make a different choice. I've heard it described as bullets to the DNA. Dr. Doug Grossman: There are different ways that UV can damage the skin. The UV can directly interact with the DNA and damage it in that way. This could result in mutations and so that when the cells divide- Interviewer: Which all cells do. That's what cells do. Dr. Doug Grossman: That's right. That's right. Particularly in the skin because the skin is always turning over and so you can introduce mutations that way. UV radiation also generates what we refer to as oxidative damage. These are chemical species that are generated in the skin upon UV exposure that damage all parts of the tissues: the proteins, the cell membranes. So there's that type of damage as well. Interviewer: Somebody might think, "Well, I've damaged my skin. It dies. It sloughs off." But what happens is when that cell divides now you've got these mutations that could lead to skin cancer. Am I making... Dr. Doug Grossman: Right. And so again the skin does turn over. Many of the cells that are dividing will ultimately die and be shut off. Changes in those cells are not going to result in skin cancer. However, there are what we call skin stem cells that are very long-lived that give rise to the cells that ultimately continue to grow in the skin and you generally don't lose those cells. And so if those cells accumulate this damage and these mutations they can ultimately give rise to skin cancer. Interviewer: And how bad is skin cancer? Dr. Doug Grossman: It's a range. It's a spectrum. Many skin cancers if they're detected very early are quite easy to treat and they are very localized in the skin and we can remove those with a small surgical procedure. Interviewer: And I'd imagine once you start getting that it's going to continue because those cells are damaged. Dr. Doug Grossman: If you get skin cancer in one location then your risk for getting it in another location increases because you have all these both genetic environmental risk factors that have led to the first skin cancer. We know that patients that have a skin cancer generally about half of them will get another one within the next couple of years. Interviewer: Yeah. Dr. Doug Grossman: That's primarily non-melanoma skin cancer. The melanoma skin cancer which is much more serious... Interviewer: More on the other end of the spectrum. Dr. Doug Grossman: Because it can spread can be a lot more unpredictable. That can occur in young patients, it can occur without much warning. About a third of melanomas are not related to sun exposure. And so we advocate all patients to monitor their skin on a monthly basis. Anything new or changing should be looked at. But we do know that over two-thirds of melanomas are related to sun exposure. Interviewer: Any final thoughts on this topic? Dr. Doug Grossman: I think my main message would be, be aware of your skin. It always surprises me how often we pick up melanomas in patients that had no idea that something was on their back or somewhere else on their skin that just because they weren't monitoring. I recommend again once a month that patients look at their skin, have someone else look at your scalp, look at your back, the areas that you can't monitor well on your own. Anything new or changing or that looks different from other spots on your skin would be something to get checked out. Announcer: We're your daily dose of science. Conversation. Medicine. This is The Scope. University of Utah Health Sciences Radio. |
|