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Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars
Scars, Burns & Healing, Volume: 3, Start page: 205951311668980
Swansea University Author: Ernest Azzopardi
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/2059513116689805
Abstract
The formation of a wide range of excessive scars following various skin injuries is a natural consequence of healing. Scars resulting from surgery or trauma affect approximately 100 million people per annum in the developed world and can have profound physical, aesthetic, psychological and social co...
Published in: | Scars, Burns & Healing |
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ISSN: | 2059-5131 2059-5131 |
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2017
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa47906 |
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2019-01-03T12:24:03.8984870 v2 47906 2018-12-07 Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars 085180eab0379efceb426fa9990ba928 0000-0002-4511-0954 Ernest Azzopardi Ernest Azzopardi true false 2018-12-07 MEDS The formation of a wide range of excessive scars following various skin injuries is a natural consequence of healing. Scars resulting from surgery or trauma affect approximately 100 million people per annum in the developed world and can have profound physical, aesthetic, psychological and social consequences. Thus, scar treatment is a priority for patient and physician alike. Laser treatment plays an important role in scar management with additional support from ancillary modalities. Subsequent to part 1: Burns scars, part 2 focuses on our strategies and literature review of treatment of keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars where lasers are used in conjunction with other measures, and illustrated with case studies. Journal Article Scars, Burns & Healing 3 205951311668980 2059-5131 2059-5131 Corticosteroids, fluorouracil, laser, multimodality scar management, scar, silicone, surgery 31 12 2017 2017-12-31 10.1177/2059513116689805 COLLEGE NANME Medical School COLLEGE CODE MEDS Swansea University 2019-01-03T12:24:03.8984870 2018-12-07T10:13:09.9652085 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Swansea University Medical School - Medicine Rory Boyd McGoldrick 1 Evgenia Theodorakopoulou 2 Ernest Azzopardi 0000-0002-4511-0954 3 Maxwell Murison 4 0047906-03012019122251.pdf 47906.pdf 2019-01-03T12:22:51.3330000 Output 789832 application/pdf Version of Record true 2019-01-01T00:00:00.0000000 Released under the terms of a Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial 3.0 License (CC-BY-NC). true eng |
title |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
spellingShingle |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars Ernest Azzopardi |
title_short |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
title_full |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
title_fullStr |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
title_full_unstemmed |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
title_sort |
Lasers and ancillary treatments for scar management Part 2: Keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars |
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085180eab0379efceb426fa9990ba928 |
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085180eab0379efceb426fa9990ba928_***_Ernest Azzopardi |
author |
Ernest Azzopardi |
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Rory Boyd McGoldrick Evgenia Theodorakopoulou Ernest Azzopardi Maxwell Murison |
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Scars, Burns & Healing |
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205951311668980 |
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description |
The formation of a wide range of excessive scars following various skin injuries is a natural consequence of healing. Scars resulting from surgery or trauma affect approximately 100 million people per annum in the developed world and can have profound physical, aesthetic, psychological and social consequences. Thus, scar treatment is a priority for patient and physician alike. Laser treatment plays an important role in scar management with additional support from ancillary modalities. Subsequent to part 1: Burns scars, part 2 focuses on our strategies and literature review of treatment of keloid, hypertrophic, pigmented and acne scars where lasers are used in conjunction with other measures, and illustrated with case studies. |
published_date |
2017-12-31T04:41:15Z |
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1821379108199727104 |
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11.04748 |