LUIKART R, AYRES S, WILSON JW. Surgical planing of the skin; dichlorotetrafluoro-ethane as a freezing agent.
Calif Med 1956;
84:151-4. [PMID:
13304667 PMCID:
PMC1532901]
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Abstract
Surgical skin planing is, in the hands of an experienced operator, a safe and highly effective procedure for treating a number of cutaneous defects, most notably pitted acne scars. The operation is facilitated by the use of a new instrument (jet-spray handpiece) which allows the operator to freeze the skin and plane it almost simultaneously, and by a new freezing agent, dichlorotetrafluoro-ethane, which adds to the safety by eliminating the old hazards of inflammability, explosion, and the toxic inhalation of ethyl chloride. The ability to sharply differentiate between keloid and hypertrophic scar is fundamental to surgical skin planing. A hypertrophic scar results from the removal or destruction of the cutaneous appendages (hair follicles, oil and sweat glands and ducts); whereas a keloid is an idiosyncratic response without regard to damage of the appendages.Properly performed surgical planing does not entirely remove these appendages and therefore healing occurs without scarring.
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