2023-02-21

Women's Health Mag

After exhausting ever topical “fading” treatment, it’s time to elevate your plan of attack.

Everything You Need to Know About Radiofrequency Microneedling for Acne Scars

Read the full blog HERE

BY KRISTINA RODULFO PUBLISHED: MAR 10, 2021

The most frustrating thing about acne is that even when it’s gone, it’s never really gone. I can have months-long streaks without a single zit, but when I look in the mirror, I see reminders of past breakouts: brown speckles on my cheeks, tiny divots along my cheekbones, flat but visible spots on my chin.

There is no “instant” solution here: Treating acne scars requires a long-term, multipronged approach and a whole lot of patience. After exhausting all the topical “fading” products along with wearing SPF daily, I felt ready to elevate my plan of attack—safely. (My derm took every precautionary measure, scheduling no overlapping patients, and I wore a KN95 mask to the office.) Melissa Kanchanapoomi Levin, MD, founder of Entière Dermatology in New York, recommended Lutronic Genius, which is a radiofrequency microneedling machine, and LaseMD Ultra, a resurfacing laser. The goal? Even-toned, smooth skin—no makeup required.

Radiofrequency microneedling helps tone down scars by promoting fresh collagen.

Rf Microneedling acne
Here, Dr. Levin is using the Genius radiofrequency microneedling tool as I hold cooling air to help the hard part go quickly.

Start to finish, the procedures took one hour, but most of it was sitting with numbing cream on (your provider will customize your pain management for you).

The Genius has a stamp-like applicator with 48 tiny needles to puncture skin in two passes, and Dr. Levin methodically worked over every inch of my face in sixths. My pain tolerance is pretty low (like, bikini waxes are an 8 on a scale of 1 to 10 for me), but I powered through the 20 minutes of ouch because this temporary trauma to the skin works magic: “Acne scars are basically abnormal clumps of collagen,” Dr. Levin says. “Procedures like this help break up those abnormal clumps.

My derm combined the radiofrequency microneedling with a laser treatment for double the benefits.Immediately after the microneedling Dr. Levin followed up with LaseMD. It shoots a laser column into skin that feels like warm sparks—not painful at all compared to microneedling. “We combine the two because they’ve been studied in combination, one, to help with the healing process, and two, to help enhance results,” Dr. Levin said.

While the microneedling addresses texture, wrinkles, and volume loss, the five minutes of laser love targets pigmentation in the upper layer of skin and promotes collagen remodeling to make pores look tighter.

Healing post microneedling takes about a week.

Right after the treatment, my skin was red—as if I had gotten a moderate sunburn. Over the next several days, I noticed marks on my cheeks from the laser, a few tiny red scabs, and a sand-paper-like texture all over. One week later, however, my face had healed, and I started to notice some major pros—bouncier, plumper-feeling skin in particular. (True story: My fiancé paused when he kissed my cheek to say it felt “firmer”!).

You’ll start to notice results in one month.