Cosmetic laser advances gain momentum

Clearing vascular and pigmented lesions In treating vascular and pigmented lesions, the Excel V (Cutera), a potassium titanyl phosphate (KTP) and Nd:YAG laser, is the new gold standard, said Dr. Lee, who helped develop it. “The KTP and Nd:YAG laser can treat any kind of vascular or pigmented lesion, which makes it much more versatile than the older pulsed dye lasers,” she said. She explained that the yellow-wavelength 585-nm pulsed dye laser can treat telangiectasias but not pigment, but the 532-nm green-wavelength KTP laser treats both vascular and pigmented lesions. Reddy and colleagues reported on this technology in the January 2013 issue of the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology, concluding that a single treatment could effectively achieve up to 75 percent improvement in port wine stains in a study involving five patients. Although clinicians have been using lasers for more than 20 years to target unwanted blood vessels, some childhood vascular malformations are less amenable to treatment or require many treatments, so clinicians are also combining laser treatments with topical or oral medications to enhance the effects, said Tina S. Alster, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, D.C. “Additional studies need to be performed, but in terms of proliferative hemangiomas, which may continue to grow despite the use of lasers, newer adjunctive treatments like propranolol have fewer side effects than others (like corticosteroids) used in the past,” Dr. Alster said. Reddy and colleagues reported on the use of pulsed dye lasers and propranolol to treat infantile hemangiomas in the March 2013 issue of Dermatologic Surgery, finding that the addition of PDL led to better outcomes for patients with hemangiomas — faster healing and a greater likelihood of complete clearance — than treatment with propranolol by itself.
Diane Donofrio Angelucci, contributing writer, 2013-11-01, American Academy of Dermatology inc.

Cosmetic laser advances gain momentum

«Pour traiter les lésions vasculaires et pigmentées, le Laser Excel V est le nouveau standard» dit Dr Lee, qui a participé à son développement.

Dre Suzanne Gagnon

Suite à l’obtention de son diplôme du cours classique en 1965, Dre Suzanne Gagnon a suivi son cours de médecin à l’Université de Montréal.Après l’obtention de son diplôme de médecine générale en 1973, elle a poursuivi son entraînement pendant 4 années supplémentaires dans les hôpitaux suivants : Hôpital Notre-Dame, Hôpital Hôtel Dieu et Hôpital Sainte-Justine. Elle a ainsi obtenu son diplôme de médecin spécialiste en dermatologie en 1977. Elle est fellow du collège Royal du Canada (FRCP), membre de la corporation professionnelle des médecins spécialistes du Québec (CSPQ) et fellow de l’American Academy of Dermatology (FAAD). Dre Suzanne Gagnon pratique la dermatologie en cabinet privé depuis 1977 et sa sœur Dre Madeleine Gagnon s’est jointe à elle en 1981. Dre Gagnon a été membre et chef de service de dermatologie à l’Hôpital Cité de la Santé de Laval pendant 20 ans.Elle se perfectionne en dermatologie esthétique depuis 1982 et elle est considérée pionnière dans le domaine.