Microdermabrasion Shown To Be More Effective

November 30th, 2009 by Celeste

acne-treatment-microdermabrasionA few months ago I purchased my very own microdermabrasion machine and it’s been really fun introducing my clients to this new skin care treatment. If you’ve never heard of microdermabrasion it’s a rough buffing of the skin that does a better job of removing wrinkles and acne scars and stimulating healing than a gentler rubbing of a normal facial. Here’s more from Skininc.com that you may find useful to learn more about microdermabrasion.

The University of Michigan researchers explain it this way…
Known as microdermabrasion, skin buffing has become a popular way to improve the appearance of wrinkles, acne scars, skin discoloration and other signs of aging skin. The procedure involves buffing the skin with grains of diamond or another hard substance such as aluminum oxide crystals.

study leader Darius J. Karimipour, MD, an assistant professor of dermatology at Michigan said…

Laser resurfacing is considered the gold standard for removing wrinkles, acne scars and skin discoloration, but it requires a long healing period after treatment and can sometimes leave the skin damaged. But with microdermabrasion,  the skin heals quickly. Someone could have a treatment at lunchtime and return to work with only a little redness. We came up with the idea of a more aggressive approach. If we treated the skin more aggressively with microdermabrasion, we could generate more collagen.

Earlier studies had found that aluminum oxide microdermabrasion does not always stimulate collagen production, that’s why I use diamond tips for my microdermabrasion treatments.

To find out, Karimipour’s team took skin samples from the arms of 40 people with sun-damaged skin. Samples were taken before and after the participants had microdermabrasion with either a coarse- or medium-grit, diamond-studded wand. The researchers found that the course-grit diamond increased the production of compounds associated with wound healing and skin remodeling. These included cytokeratin 16, which helps skin heal after injury.

In addition, the coarse-grit buffing produced antimicrobial peptides that fight infection and substances that break down the skin’s structural proteins to let the skin rebuild. The researchers also found that skin produced other substances that induce collagen production. These changes were not seen in skin treated with the medium-grit device, they noted.

Karimipour talked about his findings that are published in the October issue of Archives of Dermatology…

This research gives us the basis to believe that aggressive microdermabrasion abrasion could potentially result in beneficial effects like we see in other more aggressive procedures, like laser resurfacing. However, he predicted that aggressive microdermabrasion would not replace laser resurfacing. Microdermabrasion is not for the most severe cases but rather for fine-line wrinkles and shallow acne scars.

Jeffrey Salomon, MD, an assistant clinical professor of plastic surgery at Yale University School of Medicine, said,

The more damage induced to the skin, by whatever mechanism, the stronger the body’s repair response.

Treating the skin first with chemical peeling agents can reduce the amount of grit needed to get a skin-repair response equivalent to that of a coarser-grit wand, Salomon went on to say…

So there are a variety of parameters that can be manipulated to achieve equivalent results, independent of the coarseness of the grit. In the end, you do need to induce an injury to the skin to get objective evidence of skin rejuvenation.

Have you ever had a microdermabrasion treatment? If so, let us know how it went in the comment box below. If not, contact me today for more information or to book your first microdermabrasion treatment.

Posted in Skin Care Tips

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.