Posts Tagged ‘active fx skin tightening’

Titan vs. Active FX for Skin Tightening?

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Overall, the Active FX works better for skin tightening but both procedures have their advantages.  The Titan uses a non-ablative infrared light to heat dermal collagen and causes both collagen contraction and new collagen deposition which helps tighten the skin.  The Titan requires three procedures but there is little to no discomfort and zero downtime.  Patients can expect about 5-10% tightening after each procedure which last for 1-2 years.

The Active FX uses a CO2 laser to removal a small core of tissue (about 1 hair thick) which literal decreases the amount of skin. During a face lift approximately 30 square cm of skin are removed, during an Active FX procedure approximately 20-25 square cm of skin are removed.  There is also a significant thermal effect from the Active FX which causes the tissue around the removal site to shrink and also stimulates new collagen deposition. Although there is very little discomfort most patient prefer to take between 5-7 days off before returning to social activities. A single Active FX treatment can tighten tissue from 10-35% depending on the aggressiveness of the treatment. Results last several years.

What’s the best way to tighten loose skin?

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

There are several “Skin Tightening” devices, and none are created equally.  The two main categories are:

  1. Ablative (vaporized some elements of the skin)
  2. Non-ablative.  

The non ablative procedures have little to no downtime and tend to cost a little less per procedure while the ablative procedure tend to provide better results but can have significant down time.

Ablative: higher cost, better results, more downtime, usually single treatment

CO2
The ”gold standard” of tissue tightening is full CO2 resurfacing.  This procedure ablates 100% of skin over the treated area.  It can range in cost from $5000-$15000 dollars and usually requires at least two weeks of downtime but usually more.  Results are normally significant and last several years.  Redness after the procedure can last months and other side effects can include permanent lightening of the skin and or scaring.

Fractionated CO2
Fractionated procedures, such as Active/DeepFX and CO2 Fraxel, normally ablate anywhere from 20-80% of the skin by punching holes about twice the diameter of a human hair into the skin.  These procedures offer many of the tightening benefits of full CO2 with less downtime, cost and risk of long term side effects.  

Although I am not aware of any head to head studies that specifically address skin tightening between full CO2 and fractioned CO2, I can say that during an Active/Deep FX procedure a provider can actually watch the skin tighten as the laser passes over the treatment area. 

Cost is about $2500-$4000.  Expect anywhere from 5 day to 2 weeks of downtime with fractionated CO2 depending on how aggressively your provider performs the treatment. The procedure provides excellent results that last several years.

Non-Ablative: Lower cost, little or no downtime, less results, usually a series of treatments

Titan
Infrared light used to heat collagen so it shrinks and simulated new collagen growth over a 3-6 month period.  I have used this machine since 2004 and works well for laxity around the eyes, cheeks and neck, so-so for jowls. 

Procedure cost about $800-$1000 for a full face. There is no downtime but plan on at least three procedures.  Results usually last about 18 months, and about 80-85% of patients are happy with results. This is a very tolerable procedure, and the side effects are limited to a very rare blister.  

The LuxIR also uses infrared light to treat skin laxity, but there seems to be slightly less consistency in the literature with this devise.

Thermage
Uses Radiofrequency to heat tissue.  Although I have seen this machine be effective the reports in the literature say that it only works well about 29% of the time. 

The treatments can be very painful and in rare cases radiofrequency can cause damage to the fat layer under the skin resulting in loss of volume over that area.  Cost range from $1000-$3500 and plan on 1-3 procedures with little to no downtime.

What's the best way to tighten loose skin?

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

There are several “Skin Tightening” devices, and none are created equally.  The two main categories are:

  1. Ablative (vaporized some elements of the skin)
  2. Non-ablative.  

The non ablative procedures have little to no downtime and tend to cost a little less per procedure while the ablative procedure tend to provide better results but can have significant down time.

Ablative: higher cost, better results, more downtime, usually single treatment

CO2
The ”gold standard” of tissue tightening is full CO2 resurfacing.  This procedure ablates 100% of skin over the treated area.  It can range in cost from $5000-$15000 dollars and usually requires at least two weeks of downtime but usually more.  Results are normally significant and last several years.  Redness after the procedure can last months and other side effects can include permanent lightening of the skin and or scaring.

Fractionated CO2
Fractionated procedures, such as Active/DeepFX and CO2 Fraxel, normally ablate anywhere from 20-80% of the skin by punching holes about twice the diameter of a human hair into the skin.  These procedures offer many of the tightening benefits of full CO2 with less downtime, cost and risk of long term side effects.  

Although I am not aware of any head to head studies that specifically address skin tightening between full CO2 and fractioned CO2, I can say that during an Active/Deep FX procedure a provider can actually watch the skin tighten as the laser passes over the treatment area. 

Cost is about $2500-$4000.  Expect anywhere from 5 day to 2 weeks of downtime with fractionated CO2 depending on how aggressively your provider performs the treatment. The procedure provides excellent results that last several years.

Non-Ablative: Lower cost, little or no downtime, less results, usually a series of treatments

Titan
Infrared light used to heat collagen so it shrinks and simulated new collagen growth over a 3-6 month period.  I have used this machine since 2004 and works well for laxity around the eyes, cheeks and neck, so-so for jowls. 

Procedure cost about $800-$1000 for a full face. There is no downtime but plan on at least three procedures.  Results usually last about 18 months, and about 80-85% of patients are happy with results. This is a very tolerable procedure, and the side effects are limited to a very rare blister.  

The LuxIR also uses infrared light to treat skin laxity, but there seems to be slightly less consistency in the literature with this devise.

Thermage
Uses Radiofrequency to heat tissue.  Although I have seen this machine be effective the reports in the literature say that it only works well about 29% of the time. 

The treatments can be very painful and in rare cases radiofrequency can cause damage to the fat layer under the skin resulting in loss of volume over that area.  Cost range from $1000-$3500 and plan on 1-3 procedures with little to no downtime.