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History of lasers in dermatology.

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TLDR
In the 1950s, based on the theory of stimulating radiant energy published by Albert Einstein in 1916, the collaboration of physicists and electrical engineers, searching for monochromatic radiation to study the spectra of molecules, led to the invention of the first laser in 1960.
Abstract
In the 1950s, based on the theory of stimulating radiant energy published by Albert Einstein in 1916, the collaboration of physicists and electrical engineers, searching for monochromatic radiation to study the spectra of molecules, led to the invention of the first laser in 1960. Ophthalmologists and dermatologists were the first to study the biological effects and therapeutic possibilities of laser beams. The construction of new laser systems emitting energy at different wavelengths or with different durations, as well as the development of new concepts of the biomedical effects, led to its broad use in surgery in the treatment of vascular and pigmented lesions as well as cosmetic applications.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathology of the effect of the laser beam on the skin

TL;DR: The effect of the laser on the eye has been known since the work of Zaret and the effect on the skin is not well known, but subjectively no effects at all or only a slight pricking sensation of the skin are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective Thermal Effects with Pulsed Irradiation from Lasers: From Organ to Organelle

TL;DR: Observations in an animal model suggest that hemorrhage or, at lower doses, selective intravascular coagulation and permanent microvascular hemostasis occur and means of predicting and controlling histologically selective radiant heating effects in skin are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ocular lesions produced by an optical maser (laser).

TL;DR: Ocular lesions have been experimentally produced in rabbit by a pulsed optical maser (laser) that caused instantaneous thermal injury to the pigmented retina and iris of the brown rabbit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Removal of tattoos by CO2 laser.

TL;DR: The physics, technique of use, and results obtained in removal of tattoos by a CO2 laser are discussed and described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of wavelength on cutaneous pigment using pulsed irradiation

TL;DR: In this study, miniature black pig skin was exposed to five wavelengths covering the absorption spectrum of melanin and 504 nm produced the most pigment specific injury; this specificity being maintained even at the highest energy density of 7.0 J/cm2.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (14)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "History of lasers in dermatology" ?

Geiges et al. this paper presented a history of the use of laser technology in dermatology. 

In 1996, the erbium (Er):YAG laser with a very short wavelength of 2,940 nm allowed a more superficial vaporization of tissue and was used together with CO2 lasers for skin resurfacing. 

The first attempt to minimize this nonspecific tissue injury involved making the continuous- wave lasers discontinuous or quasi- continuous by using a mechanical shutter to interrupt the beam of light. 

The ruby laser was ineffective when used as an optical scalpel for cutting or coagulation, and when using high- energy pulses the effect became unpredictable because of cavitations (vapor bubbles). 

He expected the laser to bring substantial benefits to the treatment of skin cancer: ‘Because of the accessibility and color, laser surgery can be used extensively in the field of skin cancer. 

The medical specialists who were already treating diseases with sunlight and technical light sources were also the first to carry out biomedical research with lasers. 

In dermatology, the treatment of skin diseases with light has a long tradition – e.g. lupus vulgaris with the Finsen lamp in 1899, wound healing and rickets with artificial UV light sources afterHistory of Lasers in Dermatology 31901, and psoriasis with the combination of light and tar in 1925. 

In 1960, he presented the first functional optical ruby maser excited by a xenon flash lamp to produce a bright pulse of 693.7 nm, deep red light of about a 1- ms duration and a power output of about a billion watt per pulse [14]. 

Although the essential ideas for constructing a laser were known around 1930, it was not before the early 1950s that physicists and electrical engineers began to collaborate with the research on monochromatic radiation of constant amplitude at very small wavelengths studying the microwave and radio frequency spectra of molecules. 

In 1961, Fred J. McClung and Robert W. Hellwarth introduced the quality- switching (Q- switching) technique to shorten the pulse length to nanoseconds with the use of an electro- optical shutter that permitted the storage and subsequent release of a peak power up to gigawatts of energy [15, 16]. 

The ammonia beam maser itself was not particularly useful as its operation was limited to the resonant frequency of the ammonia molecule and could only be used at barely detectable power levels [1]. 

In the 1980s, the pulsed ruby laser was commercialized in Japan for the treatment of tattoos and pigmented lesions, while being abandoned in Europe and the USA where tattoo removal was performed by CO2 laser vaporization [27]. 

One year after Maiman had presented the first ruby laser, ophthalmologists using xenon lamps for retinal photocoagulation published on ocular lesions experimentally produced in a rabbit by an optical maser [17]. 

Theodore Maiman was enthusiastic about the first laser he constructed, but regarded it as ‘a solution looking for a problem’ [1].