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Chemical peels in active acne and acne scars

Clinics in Dermatology, 2017
Chemical peeling is a widely used procedure in the management of acne and acne scars. It causes controlled destruction of a part of or the entire epidermis, with or without the dermis, leading to exfoliation and removal of superficial lesions, followed by regeneration of new epidermal and dermal tissues.
Georgios, Kontochristopoulos   +1 more
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Multimodal Treatment of Acne, Acne Scars and Pigmentation

Dermatologic Clinics, 2009
Acne is a common skin disease that affects nearly 80% of adolescents and young adults aged 11 to 30 years. Lesions appear primarily on the face, back, chest, and other areas with a high concentration of pilosebaceous glands. The development of inflammatory lesions often drives acne patients to seek treatment.
Ava T, Shamban, Vic A, Narurkar
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Papular Acne Scars

Archives of Dermatology, 1990
One hundred thirty-three patients were examined for the presence of a cutaneous eruption consisting of small, asymptomatic, hypopigmented, follicular papules on the upper part of the trunk. The papules were present in 57% of patients who had a history of acne vulgaris and in 9% of patients who denied ever having had acne.
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Acne Scars: Dermabrasion

2020
Dermabrasion abrades the epidermis and part of the dermis, allowing reepithelialization process from keratinocytes that migrate from the epithelial appendages and collagen stimulation. In this chapter, it’s going to be presented how dermabrasion can be used to clinically approach acne scars.
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Post acne scarring: a review

Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy, 2003
Historically, post acne scarring has not been well treated. New techniques have been added and older ones modified to manage this hitherto refractory problem. The patient, his or her expectations and overall appearance as well as the morphology of each scar must be assessed and treatment designed accordingly.
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Rehabilitation of Acne Scarring

Dermatologic Clinics, 1983
Acne can produce a variety of skin defects. A scar can be characterized as narrow or wide, deep or shallow, pitted, "ice-pick"-like, crater-like, diffusely depressed, hypotrophic, hypertrophic, or keloidal, and hypopigmented or hyperpigmented. Rehabilitation techniques are selected on the basis of the type of scar.
Norman Orentreich, Nancy P. Durr
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Acne Scar: Punch Elevation

2020
Introduction: Acne vulgaris is a common disease that affects adolescents and adults and can leave permanent scars. The same patient usually has several types of scars, and each type will respond better to a particular treatment. In 1986, Johnson reported techniques using the punch instrument to treat deep acne scars using skin punctures and sterile ...
Caroline Silva Pereira   +2 more
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Acne scar treatment

2003
Acne is a chronic inflammatory disease that affects approximately 90% of those aged between 14 and 16 years, and usually disappears by the age of 25–27 years. In some cases, acne persists during adulthood.
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Post-acne Scarring

2019
Acne is a very common inflammatory disease with superimposed opportunistic infection, which, if left untreated, will often lead to lifelong scarring. The resultant scarring is graded for the purposes of classification and communication, but the scarring is a very individual issue with even minor scarring a great issue for patients.
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Fillers for Acne Scarring

2018
This chapter focuses on the different types of dermal fillers and fat transfer techniques used for the purpose of volumizing atrophic scars. The advent of fillers has provided a new host of approaches to atrophic acne scarring which can be a psychologically distressing condition. Historically, some of the earlier fillers that were used by practitioners
Karin Eshagh, Sabrina Fabi
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