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Dr Farzana Khan

Dr Farzana Khan

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Dr Farzana Khan qualified as an MD from the University of Copenhagen in 2003. She has worked in dermatology and obstetrics & gynaecology across the North of England and completed her MRCGP (CCT, 2013) and the Diploma of the Faculty of Sexual & Reproductive Health (2013). Her clinical focus is vaginal health—including dryness/GSM, sexual function concerns, lichen sclerosus, and comfort or volume changes. She offers careful assessment, discusses medical and conservative options first, and considers selected regenerative or aesthetic treatments where appropriate. Dr Farzana also trains clinicians as a KOL/Trainer with Neauvia, Asclepion Laser, and RegenLab (since 2023). Ongoing CPD includes IMCAS, CCR, ACE and expert training in women’s intimate fillers, PRP, and polynucleotide injectables. Her approach is simple: clear explanations, realistic expectations, and shared decision-making. Authored and medically reviewed by Dr Farzana Khan.

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Assessment first
CO2 vs Erbium
Skin type matters

Women’s Health Clinic FAQ

Is CO2 laser resurfacing better than Erbium laser resurfacing?

It is completely understandable to want a clear answer before choosing an ablative laser. CO2 and Erbium:YAG resurfacing can both improve texture, lines, sun damage and selected acne scars, but they create different amounts of heat, downtime and pigment risk.

Direct answer

CO2 laser resurfacing is not automatically better than Erbium laser resurfacing. CO2 may be the stronger option for deeper wrinkles, laxity, advanced sun damage or pitted acne scars because it creates more heat in the dermis and can drive greater collagen contraction. Erbium:YAG is often more precise and lower heat, so it may suit finer lines, surface texture, pigment-prone skin or people needing shorter downtime. Suitability is confirmed after consultation, skin-type assessment and review of your healing risks.

The safest decision is not based on device name alone. It depends on your skin tone, scar or wrinkle depth, hormonal and medical history, cold sore risk, previous pigmentation, downtime tolerance and how carefully you can follow aftercare.

Educational only. This FAQ is general information and does not replace an individual consultation. Results vary. Not a cure.

Patient having a calm clinical skin consultation before laser resurfacing
Personalised resurfacing planning

At a glance

The main trade-off is intensity versus recovery. These four points help frame the consultation conversation.

At a glance

CO2 and Erbium:YAG resurfacing compared

CO2 strength

Deeper heat and stronger tightening potential.

Erbium profile

More precise ablation with less thermal spread.

Typical downtime

Often 7-14 days for CO2; 3-7 days for Erbium.

Safety hinge

Skin type, aftercare and clinician experience matter.

Important suitability note

Darker, pigment-prone, recently tanned or slow-healing skin needs especially cautious assessment before any ablative laser.

Wrinkles
Acne scars
Pigment risk
Downtime
Aftercare




Detailed answer

The real difference is heat, depth and healing

Both treatments work by targeting water in the skin. The wavelength determines how efficiently that water absorbs laser energy, how much tissue is removed, and how much heat remains in the surrounding dermis.

CO2 is stronger, Erbium is more precise

CO2 at 10,600 nm creates ablation plus a wider thermal effect. Erbium:YAG at 2,940 nm is absorbed by water more efficiently, allowing thinner, more controlled removal with less collateral heat.

10,600 nm CO2
2,940 nm Er:YAG
Water absorption
Collagen remodelling

How CO2 works

CO2 removes damaged surface tissue and leaves more residual heat. That heat can contract collagen and stimulate a stronger repair response, but it also increases redness, swelling, pigment risk and downtime.

How Erbium works

Erbium:YAG energy is taken up very efficiently by water, so it can vaporise thin layers with less heat spread. This often means faster re-epithelialisation and a gentler recovery profile.

What better means

For deep etched lines, thick sun damage or pitted scars, better may mean more dermal tightening. For pigment-prone skin or limited downtime, better may mean controlled improvement with lower inflammatory load.

Healing biology

After resurfacing, keratinocytes close the surface while fibroblasts lay down new collagen. Smoking, infection risk, menopause-related oestrogen change and poor barrier care can slow this process.

The best answer is personalised

Ablative laser planning should include Fitzpatrick skin type, pigment history, scar depth, active acne, eczema or rosacea, cold sore history, recent medication, sun exposure and your ability to follow wound care.

Fractional, fully ablative, staged or combination approaches may be discussed when one area needs deeper remodelling and another needs a gentler resurfacing strategy.





Patient safety

Why the choice matters clinically

Laser resurfacing deliberately creates a controlled wound. Choosing the wrong depth or heat profile can mean unnecessary downtime, pigment change, infection risk or disappointing results.

Pigment risk

Heat and inflammation can trigger post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, especially in darker or pigment-prone skin. This risk is assessed before choosing laser type and settings.

Infection prevention

Ablated skin is temporarily vulnerable. Cold sore history, bacterial risk, cleansing technique and follow-up all influence whether healing stays on track.

Downtime planning

CO2 may require a longer visible recovery window. Erbium may heal faster, but deeper or full-field treatments still require disciplined wound care.

Result matching

Deep scars and laxity usually need more remodelling than fine texture or early sun damage. The treatment should match the concern, not the marketing label.

Ablative resurfacing is powerful medicine, not a quick facial

During healing, the skin may feel hot, tight, raw or sunburnt. Oozing, crusting, swelling and pinkness can be expected after stronger resurfacing, but worsening pain or spreading redness needs review.

Women around perimenopause and menopause may notice slower barrier recovery or drier skin. WHC planning should consider skin resilience, oestrogen-related healing context and supportive aftercare where appropriate.





Considerations

How to decide between CO2 and Erbium

A good consultation turns the question from which laser is better into which laser, setting and recovery plan is safest for your skin and goals.

Use a decision framework

CO2 may suit deeper structural concerns when downtime and pigment risk are acceptable. Erbium may suit lighter resurfacing, more reactive skin, pigment caution or a shorter recovery preference.

Consultation
Skin tone
Scar depth
Recovery plan

When CO2 may be preferred

Deeper wrinkles, pronounced laxity, thick photoaged skin, rhinophyma-type texture or deeper pitted acne scars may need the stronger thermal remodelling associated with CO2.

When Erbium may be preferred

Fine to moderate lines, superficial texture, mild photodamage, thinner skin, pigment sensitivity or a need for shorter downtime may make Erbium:YAG a more conservative option.

Preparation questions

Ask about cold sores, recent isotretinoin or photosensitising medicines, pregnancy or breastfeeding, active infection, tanning, keloid history, melasma and previous pigment change.

Aftercare commitment

Good results depend on gentle cleansing, barrier ointment, not picking crusts, avoiding sun and heat, attending review, and reintroducing active skincare only when advised.

Pricing and access

Laser resurfacing costs vary with area, depth, anaesthetic needs, follow-up and whether treatment is fractional, fully ablative or staged. Do not rely on generic estimates.

Please refer to the /pricing/ page or confirm fees before booking. Suitability, treatment scope and aftercare requirements should be confirmed before final treatment planning.





Common concerns and myths

Common myths about CO2 and Erbium lasers

The most useful comparison avoids device hype. Both technologies can be excellent in the right context and unhelpful in the wrong one.

Myth: CO2 is always better

CO2 can be stronger for deep remodelling, but stronger is not automatically safer or more suitable. In pigment-prone or lower-downtime cases, Erbium may be the wiser choice.

Myth: Erbium is too gentle to work

Erbium can produce meaningful resurfacing, especially for fine lines, texture and selected scars. The limitation is that very deep laxity or scarring may need staged or stronger treatment.

Myth: aftercare is secondary

Aftercare is central. Infection prevention, moist wound healing, sun avoidance and not picking can make the difference between smooth recovery and avoidable complications.

What about acne scars?

For atrophic acne scars, comparative evidence suggests both fractional CO2 and Erbium approaches can help. Scar type, depth, skin tone and combination treatments such as subcision may matter more than the device name alone.

What about wrinkles?

CO2 may provide more contraction for deeper etched lines. Erbium may be better suited to fine to moderate lines where faster healing and lower heat are priorities.





Safety checklist

Questions to ask before treatment

Use these checks to make sure the consultation covers safety, expectations and the practical realities of healing.

Has my skin type been assessed?

Your Fitzpatrick type, tan history, melasma tendency and past pigmentation should shape the laser choice and settings.

Have risks been explained?

You should understand redness, swelling, infection, cold sore reactivation, scarring, pigment change and the expected review pathway.

Can I manage the downtime?

CO2 often needs more social downtime. Erbium may be quicker, but stronger Erbium resurfacing still needs careful wound care.

Is aftercare written down?

Ask for clear instructions on cleansing, barrier ointment, medicines if needed, sun avoidance, SPF timing and when to restart actives.

Reassuring signs

A responsible plan includes consultation, medical history, skin-type assessment, realistic outcomes, plume and eye safety, aftercare and follow-up.

Clear plan
Written aftercare
Follow-up route

Pause and seek advice

Delay treatment if you have active infection, recent tanning, uncontrolled skin inflammation, unclear medication guidance, unrealistic expectations or no aftercare support.

Active infection
Recent tan
No follow-up




When to escalate

When to escalate after resurfacing

Some redness, swelling, heat and crusting can be part of expected healing. The warning signs below need prompt clinical advice because delayed treatment can increase scarring or pigment risk. Use NHS 111 online

Worsening pain or heat

Pain that escalates rather than settles, spreading heat, increasing tenderness or one-sided swelling should be reviewed promptly.

Infection signs

Seek advice for spreading redness, pus, fever, chills, foul smell, rapidly worsening crusting or feeling generally unwell.

Cold sore symptoms

Tingling, grouped blisters or soreness around the mouth or treated area can indicate viral reactivation and should be assessed quickly.

Eye or breathing symptoms

Eye pain, vision change, facial swelling affecting the eyes, chest pain or breathing difficulty needs urgent medical help.

Use NHS 111 for urgent advice or call 999 in a life-threatening emergency, including severe allergic symptoms, breathing difficulty, chest pain or sudden severe illness.

More detail about CO2 versus Erbium resurfacing

Can the two lasers be combined?

Sometimes, yes. A clinician may use a stronger approach on deeper scars or etched lines and a more conservative approach on surrounding skin. This depends on device availability, training, skin type and healing risk.

What does treatment feel like?

Patients often describe ablative resurfacing as hot, sharp or sunburn-like despite numbing and cooling. Stronger treatment may involve local anaesthetic injections, eye shields for periocular work and a warm or burning sensation afterwards.

How long does redness last?

Visible healing may take days, but pinkness can last weeks and sometimes longer after intensive CO2 resurfacing. Erbium often settles faster, although depth and individual healing biology still matter.

What should I avoid before treatment?

  • Recent tanning or deliberate sun exposure.
  • Active cold sores, infection, broken skin or inflammatory flare-ups.
  • Unsupervised exfoliating acids, retinoids or harsh skincare close to treatment.
  • Smoking, where possible, because it can slow oxygen delivery to healing skin.

When might resurfacing not be suitable?

It may be postponed or avoided during pregnancy or breastfeeding, active infection, unstable melasma, recent isotretinoin use, keloid tendency, poor wound healing, recent tanning or when aftercare cannot be followed. Please confirm this detail before final output if any medical history is unclear.

Related questions

Is CO2 better for acne scars? It may be better for deeper pitted scars, but scar type and combination treatments matter. Is Erbium safer for darker skin? It often carries a lower heat-related pigment risk, but every ablative laser still carries possible side effects. Will one session be enough? CO2 is often used for stronger single-session change, while Erbium may be staged for gradual improvement.

Next step

Choose the resurfacing plan your skin can heal from well

If you are weighing CO2 against Erbium, book a consultation so your skin type, goals, medical history, downtime and aftercare capacity can be assessed before any recommendation is made.

Educational only. This page is for general education and cannot confirm suitability, diagnose a skin condition or replace personalised medical advice. Results vary. Not a cure.

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