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Red light-emitting diode (LED) therapy accelerates wound healing post-blepharoplasty and periocular laser ablative resurfacing 

Authors: Mario A. Trelles a; Ineacutes Allones a
Affiliation:   a Instituto Meacutedico Vilafortuny / Antoni de Gimbernat Foundation, Cambrils, Spain
DOI: 10.1080/14764170600607731
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: journal Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy, Volume 8, Issue 1 April 2006 , pages 39 - 42
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
Previously published as: Journal of Cutaneous Laser Therapy (1462-883X)
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Abstract

Background and aims. Blepharoplasties can be associated with sequelae-related patient downtime, often extended or reinforced by periocular laser ablative resurfacing. The present controlled study examined the effects of a new-generation LED phototherapy system on enhancing wound healing following such combination surgery.

Methods. Two males and eight females participated in the trial, with ages ranging from 44 to 59 years (average 52.3 years). Following blepharoplasty and Er:YAG/CO2 laser ablative resurfacing, one-half of each subject's face was treated with the red LED therapy (20 min, 96 J/cm2, 633 nm), the contralateral half being the unirradiated control. Patients reported subjectively on pain levels and resolution. Resolution of erythema, edema, bruising and days to healing were independently evaluated from the clinical photography. All findings were compared between the treated and untreated sides.

Results. In all instances, the LED therapy-treated side was statistically significantly superior to the unirradiated control by a factor of two to three.

Conclusions. In this small series of 10 patients, red LED phototherapy after blepharoplasty and laser ablative resurfacing cut the time to resolution of side effects and the healing time by one-half to one-third compared with contralateral unirradiated controls. Further studies are warranted with larger populations to confirm these findings.
Keywords: Blepharoplasty; laser ablative resurfacing; light-emitting diodes; phototherapy; wound healing
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