Sun exposed skin changes 2 0 dr zahir ppt

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Sun Exposed Skin Changes & Skin Rejuvenation Therapy Khalique Zahir MD, FACS Assistant Prof of Plastic Surgery VCU School of Medicine Chairman of Plastic Surgery INOVA Hospital System


Disclosure  “IMANA is committed to providing CME activities that are fair, balanced, and free of bias. Full and specific disclosure information is provided in your handouts.”  I have no relevant financial relationship with any commercial interest.


What are our Goals?  Identify Skin problems  Classify skin disorders  Come up with a treatment plan  Conservative and laser treatments


10 Common Conditions caused because of Sun Exposure  Sunburn  Photosensitivity  Age spots  Moles  PMLE- Polymorphous Light Eruptions  Solar Elastosis  Skin Cancer  Melanoma  Basal Cell Carcinoma  Squamous Cell Carcinoma


Sunburn  Africa is a good place to get a “sun burn”  Over exposure to ultraviolet sun rays  Melanin can protect but not when exposed too long to the sun  Symptoms  Minor  Redness of skin  Burning of affected areas  Tightness of skin  Itching and peeling of skin


Sunburn  Severe Sunburn  Blisters, Chills, Fever, Weakness and Shock

 Treatment  Apply lotions ideally with aloe vera to burnt area  Aspirin or ibuprofen to reduce pain  Hydration  If skin peels do not irritate  Apply sun block of SPF 30 or greater at least 20 min prior


Age Spots / Melasma  Over exposure to the sun  Brown markings that appear anywhere on the body  Changes occur because of inability to fend off UV rays  Symptoms  Brown or Gray pigmentation  Pigmentation is flat on skin

 Treatment  Bleaching creams, hydroquinone  Alpha hydroxy lotions  IPL laser


Melasma


Melasma  Characteristics  Postinflammatory pigmentation  Lentigo  Drug- induced pigmentation, eg minocycline  Lichen Planus  Skin bx might be needed

 Treatments  Stop hormonal contraception  Hydroquinone 2-4% every night for 2-4 months…. DO NOT use too long or you can turn BLUE – GREY !!  Azealic acid can be used long term  Kojic acid


Melasma  Treatment  Ascorbic acid through its action with copper decreases pigmentation production  Others include mequinol, arbutin and deoxyarbutin (from berries), licorice extract, rucinol, resveratrol, 4-hydroxy-anisole, 2,5-dimethyl4-hydroxy-3(2H)-furanone and/or N-acetyl glucosamine

 Device usage  Fraxel laser  IPL – Intense pulse light  Erbium-YAG, Ruby and Alexandrite laser although used may make postinflammatory pigmentation worse


Photosensitivity  Sun Allergy  Also caused by fragrance, plant, fruit, vegetable and chemical contact  Medicines – sulfonamides, TCN, Amiodarones and Thiazides  Caused by Diseases including lupus, rosacea and psoriasis, metabolic disorders


Photosensitivity  Symptoms  Red or pink skin rash  Itching  Burning sensation  Scaly and blistered areas of skin

 Treatment  Natural medicines – beta-carotene, fish oil, vitamin B3, vitamin B6 and adenosine monophosphate  Phototherapy


Moles  Moles are a common effect of sun exposure and can appear anywhere  Occur most often before age 20  Some harmless, some cancerous  Symptoms  Raised skin  Skin tone, brown, reddish-brown or black coloring  Rounded or oval shape  Changing ABCDE


Polymorphous Light Eruption  Affects women between 20-40  Occurs to women sensitive to sunlight and appears on skin  Symptoms  A red or pink and bumpy rash  Raised areas of skin  Itchiness  Dry patches  Burning sensation

 Treatment  Hydroxychlorquine (Plaquenil)  Avoid sunlight exposure


Solar Elastosis  Wrinkling that occurs when skin’s elastic tissue deteriorates from sun exposure  Symptoms  Wrinkles  Loose and sagging skin  Deep lines in skin

 Treatment  Imiquimod or tacrolimus to help improve tightness  Laser resurfacing


Melanoma  Symptoms  Change in color, elevation, shape, size etc  A new mole or other abnormal skin growth  Itching  Bleeding or discharge of the mole

 Treatment  Mole removal  Radiation therapy  Chemotherapy


Melanoma  Diagnosis  A - Asymmetry  B - Border irregularity  C - Color variation  D - Diameter > 6 mm  E - Evolution


Melanoma Morphologic Types Type Superficial spreading

Frequency 60%-70%

Features Flat during early phase; notching, scalloping, areas of regression

Nodular

15%-30% Darker and thicker than superficial spreading, rapid onset; commonly blue-black or blue-red (5% amelanotic) Lentigo maligna

~5%

Enlarge slowly; usually large, flat, tan or brown

Uncommon

Asians (46%)

On soles, palms, beneath nail beds;

lentiginous

Blacks (70%)

usually large, tan or brown; irregular border; subungual melanoma more common in older, dark-skinned people


Squamous Cell Cancer  Symptoms  Unhealed sore  Changes in mole  Scaly growth with red areas

 Treatment  Removal  Mohs surgery  Radiation therapy  Chemotherapy


Squamous Cell Cancer


Squamous Cell Cancer


Basal Cell Cancer  UV exposure –

History of intermitent sun exposure in youth more important than cumulative life time UV

Seems to be a plateau of UV exposure beyond which no increase in risk is seen

 Fair skin  Immunosupression (HIV, transplant)  Radiation  Arsenic  Chronic ulcer


Basal Cell Cancer


Superficial Basal Cell Cancer


Superficial Basal Cell


Basal Cell Cancer  Most common type  Dome papule  Pearly border  Telangiectasia  Firm consistency  May be crusted/eroded  can have pigment


Non Ablative Treatment  Safer than ablative  Requires epidermal cooling  Reduces efficacy  Small therapeutic window  Achieves no resurfacing

Nd:YAG 1,320 nm pulsed laser e.g., “Cooltouch”


Fractional Resurfacing  New class of therapy  Intact stratum corneum  Thousands of wounded tissue islets completely surrounded by viable tissue for rapid healing  Immediate and delayed therapeutic results  Epidermal coagulation for resurfacing effect  Dermal denaturization for deep remodeling


FDA Approved Indications for Use of the Fraxel laser  Treatment of wrinkles around the eyes (crows feet)  Removal of dyschromia (brown spots) caused by sun damage or aging  Skin resurfacing procedures (texture improvement, i.e. acne scarring)  Acne Scars, Surgical Scars, Traumatic Scars  Melasma (mask of pregnancy)  All skin types  Anywhere on the body


Understanding Treatment  Each session targets 15-30% of skin  Time to treat:  Full face: 30 min;  Neck/Hands: 10 min

 Typical course: 3-5 treatments spaced 14-30 days apart  Discomfort managed by topical anesthetic and air cooling


Before Treatment

Two Months After 4 Treatments


Melasma: Before and After 10mJ 2500 MTZ/cm2 Bi-weekly intervals


Home

Melasma: Before and After


FRAXEL LASER Melasma: Before and After

Before Treatment

After Treatment


CO2 Resurfacing

1 Day Post CO2 Resurfacing

FRAXEL LASER

1 Day Post Fraxel Laser Treatment


Baseline

Immediately post treatment


Fraxel Laser

CO2 LASER RESURFACING

CO2 Laser


Asian Resurfacing


Resurfacing


Tx for Acne Scarring


Summary  Skin care management done with UV skin protection.  Identify skin type and problem with knowledge of treating or referring.  Thank you


Disclosure  “IMANA is committed to providing CME activities that are fair, balanced, and free of bias. Full and specific disclosure information is provided in your handouts.”  I have no relevant financial relationship with any commercial interest.


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