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pulseddye

Pulseddye refers to pulsed dye laser (PDL) technology, a medical laser system used to treat vascular conditions of the skin. A typical PDL emits short pulses of yellow light in the 585–595 nanometer range. The light is absorbed by oxyhemoglobin in blood vessels, causing selective photothermolysis that coagulates the targeted vessels with minimal damage to surrounding tissue.

Mechanism and parameters. The short pulse duration is designed to be comparable to the thermal relaxation time

Clinical applications. PDL is widely used to treat vascular skin lesions, including port-wine stains (capillary malformations),

Advantages and limitations. PDL offers relatively high efficacy for superficial to mid-dermal vessels with a favorable

History and usage. Since its development in the late 20th century, PDL has become a standard modality

of
superficial
and
mid-dermal
vessels,
enabling
selective
targeting.
Pulse
durations
commonly
range
from
about
0.45
to
several
milliseconds,
with
repetition
rates
typically
between
1
and
10
Hz.
Fluence
(energy
per
area)
and
spot
size
are
adjusted
based
on
vessel
size,
depth,
and
treatment
area.
Cooling
strategies
are
often
used
to
improve
comfort
and
protect
the
epidermis.
facial
and
truncal
telangiectasias,
and
acquired
vascular
lesions
such
as
rosacea-related
redness.
It
is
also
employed
to
improve
erythema
in
hypertrophic
scars
and
certain
keloids,
to
treat
some
haemangiomas
in
adults,
and
to
reduce
redness
in
various
dermatologic
conditions.
safety
profile
when
performed
by
trained
professionals.
Common
short-term
effects
include
redness,
swelling,
and
purpura
(bruise)
that
may
last
days
to
weeks.
Risks
include
transient
pigmentary
changes,
particularly
in
darker
skin
types,
as
well
as
rare
scarring
or
blistering
if
misused.
Deeper
vascular
lesions
may
respond
less
well,
and
multiple
sessions
are
often
required.
in
dermatology
for
vascular
indications,
with
numerous
devices
and
clinical
protocols
in
widespread
use.