BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES The picosecond Alexandrite laser was studied in our practice with the diffractive lens array and the flat optic to treat melasma. METHODS AND MATERIALS Sixty patients with melasma were… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES The picosecond Alexandrite laser was studied in our practice with the diffractive lens array and the flat optic to treat melasma. METHODS AND MATERIALS Sixty patients with melasma were treated in a prospective investigation with the picosecond Alexandrite laser. Nineteen patients were treated with the flat optic and 41 patients were treated with the diffractive lens array. Treatments were performed with 1 pass at 2-week intervals for 6 treatments. The Melasma Severity Index (MSI) was used to evaluate the patients before treatment and 3 and 6 months after the final treatment session. RESULTS At 6 months after the last treatment, there was an 18.5% difference between the groups with a 75.7% improvement in the MSI in patients with the diffractive lens array and a 57.2% improvement in the MSI score in patients with the flat optic. At 6 months, there was recurrence of melasma in 5% of the cases with no hyperpigmentation with the diffractive optic in contrast to recurrence in 16% of the cases in the flat optic group and a transient macular hyperpigmentation in 21% of the cases. CONCLUSION This investigation highlights the utility of a picosecond Alexandrite laser with a flat and diffractive lens to successfully treat a large percentage of Asian patients in a sunny climate.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.