Lin,
2000
Title: Reduction of regrowing hair shaft size
and pigmentation after ruby and diode laser treatment.
Authors: Lin TY, Dierickx CC, Campos VB, Farinelli
WA, Rosenthal J, Anderson RR
Journal: Arch Dermatol Res 2000 Feb-Mar;292(2-3):60-7
PMID: 10749557
Affiliated institution: Department
of Dermatology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical
School, Boston 02114, USA.
Available at:
Laser pulses which selectively damage
pigmented hair follicles are a useful treatment
for hypertrichosis. Clinically, regrowing hairs
are often thinner and lighter after treatment. In
this study, hair shaft diameter and optical
transmission (700 nm) were measured before and
after ruby (694 nm) and diode (800 nm) laser
irradiation. Hair was collected from 47 and 41
subjects treated with ruby (0.3 ms and 3 ms) and
diode (10-20 ms) lasers, respectively.
"Responders" were defined as subjects
with significant long-term hair loss as
determined by hair counts at 9 and/or 12 months
after treatment. In ruby laser responders
(34/47), regrowing hairs were significantly both
thinner (decreased diameter) and lighter
(increased transmission). In
"nonresponders" (13/47), regrowing
hairs were lighter, but not thinner. The
regrowing hair shaft absorption coefficient (as
calculated assuming Beer's law) was significantly
decreased by 0.3 ms ruby laser treatment, but was
not changed by 3 ms ruby laser or diode laser
treatment. After diode laser treatment, 38 of the
41 subjects were responders and regrowing hairs
were both thinner and lighter. These results show
that laser treatments can affect structural
recovery (size of hair), follicular pigmentation
(hair absorption coefficient), or both. Regrowth
of thinner hair (decreased shaft diameter) occurs
in conjunction with actual loss of hair. After
long pulses (3 ms ruby; diode), regrowing hair
was thinner and also lighter to an extent related
to the decrease in hair diameter. In contrast,
short ruby laser pulses (0.3 ms) appeared to be
capable of inhibiting follicular pigmentation per
se, in addition to affecting the hair diameter.
This may account for the complete regrowth of
lighter hair in "nonresponders" treated
with 0.3 ms pulses. Laser-induced reduction in
hair diameter and/or pigmentation are both
long-term responses which confer cosmetic
benefits in addition to actual hair loss.
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