Apparatus and cosmetic method for using short pulses for dermatological treatments
10517676 ยท 2019-12-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B2017/00176
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2017/00181
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/0047
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/00005
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/00458
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B18/203
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A cosmetic method of treating skin tissue with a laser source includes applying a plurality of short pulses of predetermined parameters to ramp up the temperature of the skin tissue to reach a desired temperature and then applying a plurality of short pulses to maintain a temperature dwell time. The predetermined parameters are selected from one or more of: pulse peak power, pulse duration, pulse repetition rate and laser wavelength.
Claims
1. A cosmetic method of treating skin tissue for hair removal with a laser source comprising: (a) applying a first plurality of short pulses of pulse width 0.5 ms and repetition rate of one of 500 Hz or 400 Hz of predetermined parameters at a predetermined power level X to ramp up the temperature of the skin tissue to reach a desired dwell time temperature and (b) applying a second plurality of short pulses of pulse width 0.5 ms at a predetermined power level x, wherein x<X to maintain the desired dwell time temperature; and, controlling, using a programmed controller, the application of the laser source to produce the short pulses of (a) and then (b); and further comprising, using the programmed controller, controlling a cooling device, after ramp up to the desired temperature, to cool the skin tissue, during the dwell temperature time only, to cause the temperature on the epidermis of the skin to be lower than the temperature of a hair follicle level within the skin tissue.
2. The cosmetic method of claim 1, wherein the predetermined parameters are selected from one or more of: pulse peak power, pulse duration, pulse repetition rate and laser wavelength.
3. The cosmetic method of claim 1, wherein the short pulses range in peak power levels from about 1500 W to about 8000 W.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
(4) In an aspect, a cosmetic method of treating skin tissue with a laser source includes applying a plurality of short pulses of predetermined parameters to ramp up the temperature of the skin tissue to reach a desired temperature and then applying a plurality of short pulses to maintain a temperature dwell time. The predetermined parameters are selected from one or more of: pulse peak power, pulse duration, pulse repetition rate and laser wavelength.
(5) In another aspect, the cosmetic method includes the step of cooling the skin tissue one or more of before, during and after the applying of the short pulses.
(6) The short pulses may have a range, in an exemplary application of hair removal, of from 0.1 ms to 5 ms during ramp up and during temperature dwell time, or the pulses may be different during the ramp up and temperature dwell time. In addition, the pulse repetition rate may range between 100 Hz to 200 kHz and peak power may range from 1500 W to 8000 W. The above examples may be varied as needed or desired in terms of the treatment given and the anatomy of the particular patient upon whom a procedure is be performed. For other dermatological applications, such as those mentioned herein, the parameters of application may and could likely be different from those given above.
(7) In a further aspect, the cosmetic method further includes a programmed controller to control the application of the laser to produce the short pulses. The programmed controller further controls a cooling device such that after ramp up, cooling of the skin tissue causes the temperature on the epidermis of the skin to be lower than the temperature of a hair follicle. Also, the controller controls the laser source to apply power to be higher during the ramp up time than during the subsequent dwell time.
(8) In yet a further aspect, the short pulses may have a repetition rate from about 100 Hz to about 3 kHz and may range in peak power levels from about 1500 W to about 8000 W. The short pulses during ramp up and temperature dwell time may be different.
(9) In another aspect, the method of treating skin tissue is for the purpose of one or more of: hair removal, treatment of hyperhidrosis, treatment of acne and treatment of vascular lesions.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
(10) One aim of present invention is to improve the safety and efficacy of dermatologic laser treatments. This is accomplished by providing the required temperature level to the skin tissue(s) to be treated for the required amount of time to cause apoptosis or necrosis of targeted tissue(s), with minimal effect on other tissues.
(11) To obtain effective results with a specific type of tissue, it is desirable to increase the temperature of that tissue to a certain level and then maintain the tissue at this temperature for some time (which is tissue dependent). This is known as dwell time. A schematic description of such a temperature profile is presented in
(12) To obtain such a temperature profile shown in
(13) To further increase treatment efficacy and selectivity, the present invention uses short laser pulses to obtain the desired ramp-up time and temperature and keep the temperature level during the dwell time as long as may be desired or required. There are three laser pulse parameters that can be controlled and implemented in order to obtain the desired temperature levels and ramp-up time: pulse peak power, pulse duration, and pulse repetition rate. By selectively adjusting among these parameters, good selectivity to the epidermis can be obtained as well as good selectivity between tissues within the same treatment zone (glands, organs, tissues), depending on their specific thermal relaxation times and the absorption efficiency of the laser wavelength (which is also a parameter for enhancing selectivity). Another advantage of employing a plurality of short pulses is that overshooting is prevented or at least substantially reduced due to the control that can be exercised using short pulses. Overshooting can cause excessive temperature rises that may cause discomfort or pain or even damage tissues, such as the epidermis. A suitable programmed or programmable controller may be employed to exercise control over the above parameters and even display graphically on a suitable user interface the applied pulses.
(14) While usage of short pulses to increase selectivity between two adjacent organs may be known in other environments (Mark A. Latina, U.S. Patent 005549596A; Charles P. Lin, U.S. Pat. No. 7,115,120B2), the combination with the pulse sequence and dwell time to obtain the simultaneous selectivity to the cooled epidermis layer is believed to be not known. A simulation of such pulse sequence is illustrated in
(15) The methods described above are not limited to any specific laser apparatus and thus method can be implemented in various laser treatments where cooling of the surface layer is applied. Dermatologic applications include but are not limited to: hair removal (by targeting the hair follicle), hyperhidrosis (by targeting the sweat gland), acne (by targeting the sebaceous gland), vascular lesions (by targeting blood vessels of various sizes), pigmented lesions (by targeting melanin and melanocytes) and more. Obviously, proper laser wavelength selection ensures farther enhancement of treatment selectivity.