Light Physics & Skin Optics - ✨ Shedding Light
- Electromagnetic Spectrum (EMS): Lasers utilize specific UV, visible, or infrared light wavelengths.

- Key Parameters:
- Wavelength ($\.lambda$): Governs penetration depth & chromophore targeting.
- Fluence: Energy density ($J/cm^2$).
- Pulse Duration (PD): Exposure time; critical for selective heating. Must be < target's Thermal Relaxation Time (TRT).
- Selective Photothermolysis:
- Matching $\.lambda$, PD, and fluence to precisely target chromophores, sparing adjacent tissue.
⭐ Anderson and Parrish's principle of selective photothermolysis is foundational to dermatologic laser therapy.
- Key Chromophores (Light Absorbers):
- Melanin: Hair, pigmented lesions (e.g., 755 nm Alexandrite).
- Hemoglobin: Vascular lesions (e.g., 585/595 nm PDL).
- Water: Skin resurfacing (e.g., CO2 10600 nm, Er:YAG 2940 nm).
- Tattoo Ink: Exogenous pigments with varied absorption spectra.
Lasers in Dermatology - 🎯 Zap & Renew
- Ablative Lasers: Vaporize tissue (CO2, Er:YAG). Uses: Resurfacing, scars.
- Non-Ablative Lasers: Heat tissue (Nd:YAG, PDL). Uses: Pigment, vascular, hair.
📌 Chromophores: Water (CO2/Er:YAG), Melanin (Alex/Diode/Nd:YAG), Hb (PDL/Nd:YAG).

| Laser | Type | λ (nm) | Target | Key Uses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CO2 | A | 10600 | Water | Resurfacing, scars |
| Er:YAG | A | 2940 | Water | Superficial resurfacing |
| Nd:YAG (QS) | NA | 1064, 532 | Pigment | Tattoos, pigmented lesions |
| Nd:YAG (LP) | NA | 1064 | Hb,Melanin | Hair removal (dark skin), vascular |
| Pulsed Dye (PDL) | NA | 585/595 | Hb | Vascular lesions (PWS) |
| Alexandrite | NA | 755 | Melanin | Hair removal (light skin), pigmented lesions |
| Diode | NA | 800-980 | Melanin,Hb | Hair removal |
⭐ Q-switched lasers (e.g., Nd:YAG 1064 nm for black tattoos) produce very short, high-energy pulses, ideal for tattoo removal via photoacoustic effect and treating pigmented lesions.
IPL & Photodynamic Therapy - 💡 Broad Strokes & Activated Agents
⭐ Unlike lasers, Intense Pulsed Light (IPL) emits a broad spectrum of non-coherent light (400-1200 nm), allowing treatment of multiple chromophores simultaneously.
| Feature | Intense Pulsed Light (IPL) | Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Selective photothermolysis | Photosensitizer + Light → Type II photoreaction → singlet oxygen ($^1\text{O}_2$) & ROS → cell death. |
| Light Source | Broad spectrum (400-1200 nm), non-coherent, filtered | Specific wavelengths: Blue light (~417 nm), Red light (~630 nm) |
| Photosensitizer | None | Topical: 5-Aminolevulinic acid (ALA), Methyl aminolevulinate (MAL). ALA incubation: 1-4 hours. |
| Targets | Melanin, hemoglobin | Proliferating cells (after photosensitizer uptake) |
| Key Indications | Photorejuvenation, diffuse redness, pigmentary issues, hair removal | Actinic keratosis (AK), superficial Basal Cell Carcinoma (sBCC), acne vulgaris. |
📌 Mnemonic for PDT components: "PAL" - Photosensitizer, Activating light, Local oxygen.
Safety & Complications - 🛡️ Shield & Soothe
- Patient Selection: Crucial. Assess Fitzpatrick skin type; types IV-VI ↑ risk PIH/burns.

- Fitzpatrick Skin Types & Risks
Type Sun Reaction Risk Level I-II Always/usually burns Low III Sometimes burns, tans Moderate IV-VI Rarely burns, tans easily High (PIH/burns)
- Protection:
- Ocular: Mandatory eye shields (patient) & specific eyewear (operator).
- Skin Cooling (📌 CPP): Pre, parallel, post (contact, cryogen, air) for comfort, ↓ side effects.
- Effects:
- Common: Erythema, edema, pain, purpura (PDL) - transient.
- Adverse: Pigmentary changes (PIH in IV-VI), blisters, crusts, scars, infection.
- Care:
- Pre: Sun avoidance, stop photosensitizers. Antiviral prophylaxis (HSV hx).
- Post: Sunscreen, gentle care. Topicals if needed.
-
⭐ Test spots vital for Fitzpatrick IV-VI or PIH history to minimize adverse events.
- PIH Management:
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Selective photothermolysis: specific chromophores (melanin, hemoglobin, water) absorb specific laser wavelengths.
- Q-switched lasers (Nd:YAG, Ruby) treat tattoos and pigmented lesions.
- Pulsed Dye Laser (PDL 585/595 nm) targets hemoglobin for vascular lesions.
- Ablative lasers (CO2, Er:YAG) resurface skin by targeting water.
- Intense Pulsed Light (IPL): polychromatic light for various pigment, vascular issues, and hair removal.
- For laser hair removal, Nd:YAG (1064 nm) is safer for darker skin types.
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