| Literature DB >> 27384041 |
Marek Jankowski1, Mariusz Gawrych2, Urszula Adamska2, Jakub Ciescinski3, Zbigniew Serafin3, Rafal Czajkowski2.
Abstract
Low-level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) has been applied recently to body contouring. However the mechanism of LLLT-induced reduction of subcutaneous adipose tissue thickness has not been elucidated and proposed hypotheses are highly controversial. Non-obese volunteers were subject to 650nm LLLT therapy. Each patient received 6 treatments 2-3 days apart to one side of the abdomen. The contralateral side was left untreated and served as control. Subjects' abdominal adipose tissue thickness was measured by ultrasound imaging at baseline and 2 weeks post-treatment. Our study is to the best of our knowledge, the largest split-abdomen study employing subcutaneous abdominal fat imaging. We could not show a statistically significant reduction of abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue by LLLT therapy. Paradoxically when the measurements of the loss of fat thickness on treated side was corrected for change in thickness on non treated side, we have observed that in 8 out of 17 patients LLLT increased adipose tissue thickness. In two patients severe side effect occurred as a result of treatment: one patient developed ulceration within appendectomy scar, the other over the posterior superior iliac spine. The paradoxical net increase in subcutaneous fat thickness observed in some of our patients is a rationale against liquefactive and transitory pore models of LLLT-induced adipose tissue reduction. LLLT devices with laser diode panels applied directly on the skin are not as safe as devices with treatment panels separated from the patient's skin.Entities:
Keywords: Body contouring; Fat tissue interaction; Laser lipolysis; Low-level laser therapy; Subcutaneous adipose tissue
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27384041 PMCID: PMC5288437 DOI: 10.1007/s10103-016-2021-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lasers Med Sci ISSN: 0268-8921 Impact factor: 3.161
Fig. 1One patient developed ulceration within appendectomy scar, the other over the posterior superior iliac spine
Anthropometric measurements of the studied population at baseline
| Variable | X ± S | V | As | Ku-3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 37.24 ± 13.30 | 35.72 | 0.01 | −1.91 |
| Body mass (kg) | 68.97 ± 13.67 | 19.82 | 0.95 | 1.51 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 23.60 ± 2.89 | 12.25 | 0.36 | −0.02 |
| Σ left side of abdomen (cm) | 7.24 ± 2.80 | 38.61 | −0.67 | −0.24 |
| Σ right side of abdomen (cm) | 7.15 ± 2.66 | 37.28 | −0.51 | −0.14 |
X arithmetic average, S standard deviation, V coefficient of variation, A coefficient asymmetry, Ku-3 coefficient of kurtosis
Fig. 2Post-treatment results of individual changes in abdominal fat tissue thickness
Descriptive statistics of ultrasound measurements of abdominal adipose tissue thickness
| Side | X ± S [cm] | V | As | Ku-3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight loss (kg) | 1.25 ± 1.03 | 83.59 | −0.15 | 0.38 | |
| Waist circumference loss (cm) | 1.35 ± 3.10 | 228.85 | 0.99 | 1.05 | |
| Combined adipose tissue thickness pre-treatment | Left | 7.24 ± 2.80 | 38.61 | −0.67 | −0.24 |
| Right | 7.15 ± 2.66 | 37.28 | −0.51 | −0.14 | |
| Combined adipose tissue thickness post-treatment | Left (control) | 7.40 ± 2.70 | 36.47 | −0.64 | −0.21 |
| Right (treated) | 7.08 ± 2.45 | 34.61 | −0.32 | −0.25 |
Thickness presented as a sum of three measurements over the rectus abdominis muscle from the dermis-fat interface down to the deep fat-muscle fascia interface. X arithmetic average, S standard deviation, V coefficient of variation, A coefficient asymmetry, Ku-3 coefficient of kurtosis