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Phenol peels post-application

Chapter 33 is devoted to the details of anesthesia for a phenol peel. Lip Eyelid formula can be applied without any anesthetic on small areas, however. Patients feel an intense burning sensation a few seconds after application. They will have been told that the burning sensation only lasts for 15 seconds and that they can have a nerve block if they want. Vocal anesthesia plays an important part, and the patient can take a paracetamol (acetaminophen) plus codeine tablet 1 hour before the treatment. Nerve blocks are often used to increase patient comfort 2% Hdocaine without adrenaline (epinephrine) is used, and its duration of action is sufficient. The patient should be given paracetamol plus codeine tablets for the post-peel pain, which is inevitable during the first 24 hours because of the severity and rapidity of inflammation caused by the peel. [Pg.296]

Phenol (Lip Eyelicf formula) if a full-face phenol peel does not produce adequate results, a second peel can be applied to the areas that did not respond to the first peel. The touch-up can be localized or full-face, if the condition of the skin permits and if there has been a long rest period. Skin regeneration after the second peel is much quicker, there is less edema and post-peel erythema is of a much shorter duration (2 weeks at the most). If a third phenol peel were indicated (in extremely rare cases of very thick skin, patients who smoke, or rapid resumption of facial expressions), it would most often be localized. The author has only once had to do a third phenol peel on the lip and cheek area after inadequate results on skin that was extremely oily and thick. Recovery was even faster after a third application of phenol and there was hardly any erythema. It should be noted that if a second phenol peel can boost inadequate results, a third phenol peel only brings a very slight improvement over the second. [Pg.316]

Figure 8.3 African-American with truncal congenital Becker nevus treated with one formula (Stone II 60% phenol, 0.2% croton oil) over twelve test patches, six In each of two rows. (A) Immediately after peel applications (from left to right) of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 rubs (B) top row covered with waterproof tape, bottom row covered with Aquaphor ointment (C) at 48 hours tape removed, thymol Iodide powder applied. Threshold effect between 10 and 20 rubs seen at 10 days (D) and 73 days (E) post peel... Figure 8.3 African-American with truncal congenital Becker nevus treated with one formula (Stone II 60% phenol, 0.2% croton oil) over twelve test patches, six In each of two rows. (A) Immediately after peel applications (from left to right) of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 rubs (B) top row covered with waterproof tape, bottom row covered with Aquaphor ointment (C) at 48 hours tape removed, thymol Iodide powder applied. Threshold effect between 10 and 20 rubs seen at 10 days (D) and 73 days (E) post peel...

See other pages where Phenol peels post-application is mentioned: [Pg.263]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.47]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.80 , Pg.80 , Pg.81 , Pg.82 ]




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