Atopic Dermatitis: a Short Summary
Combination of Micro Needling and Trichloracetic acid 10% Peels in the Management of Infraorbital dark circles
Markantoni V et al.
AAD 2015 Annual Meeting, San Francisco CA – United States
- The pigmented skin of dark circles appears gives and impression of tiredness
- Dark circles are very frequent and although proposed mechanisms are proposed (CLICK HERE to read more)
- Because of this, it might be a good idea to exclude other etiologies (CLICK HERE to read more)
- That being said, once the diagnosis is made treatment options are often multiple and unsatisfactory. They include whitening creams, topical retinoids, chemical peels, lasers, fat transplants, fillers and blepharoplasty (surgery)
- The following study from Greece suggests micro needling the skin followed by a five minute application of trichloracetic acid topical application:
- they performed the study in 13 female patients aged between 13 and 62, phototypes II to IV
- 4 session treatments spaced by 2 weeks
- the procedure was NOT painful
- Results:
- all patients improved.
- Doctors evaluated the improvement as “fair”, “good” or “excellent” in 94% of patients
- Patients rated the response as “fair”, “good” or “excellent” in 95.2% of cases
- Adverse events included: mild discomfort, transient erythema and edema (described as common but no figures shown)
- No recurrence was observed 4 months after the last treatment
Comment
- The photos on the poster are not published here as the patients would be identifiable.
- However there are two patients and based on this the response according to us is “fair-to-moderate”, but closer to “fair.”
- Conclusion: Although all patients appear to have improved it might have been useful to break down the results as visually not many patients would have more than a “fair” to “moderate” response.
Contributors:
Dr Christophe HSU – dermatologist. Geneva, Switzerland
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