CO2 laser explained
Safety-led guidance
Women’s Health Clinic FAQ
Can CO2 laser help treat Rhinophyma (enlarged nose)?
Rhinophyma can change the shape, texture and sometimes the function of the nose. It is linked with phymatous rosacea, where skin and oil glands thicken over time, and it can be emotionally difficult because of visible change and unfair stigma.
Direct answer
Yes. CO2 laser can help selected rhinophyma by carefully vaporising and sculpting excess thickened nasal tissue, which may improve shape and, if bulk is narrowing the nostrils, breathing comfort. It is usually considered when rhinophyma has caused visible enlargement, nodularity, pitted texture or functional obstruction. Suitability is confirmed after consultation because suspicious, rapidly changing or ulcerated areas may need assessment or biopsy first. CO2 laser does not switch off the underlying rosacea tendency, so longer-term skin and trigger management may still matter.
The key is careful diagnosis. CO2 laser is one option among laser and surgical techniques, and treatment planning should consider severity, skin type, medical history, healing capacity and whether the main concern is contour, texture, airflow or a combination of these.
Educational only. This page is general information and cannot confirm whether CO2 laser is suitable for your nose without an individual consultation. Results vary. Not a cure.

At a glance
CO2 laser treatment for rhinophyma is usually a medical contouring procedure rather than a standard cosmetic resurfacing session. These quick facts set the expectation before consultation.
At a glance
Typical points discussed before treatment
Main purpose
Remove and sculpt excess nasal tissue
Anaesthetic
Often local anaesthetic for comfort
Recovery
Crusting and pinkness are expected
Ongoing care
Rosacea control may still be needed
Important suitability note
A new, bleeding, ulcerated, asymmetric or rapidly changing nasal lesion should be clinically assessed before any laser treatment is planned.
Nasal contouring
Local anaesthetic
Aftercare matters
Red flags checked
Detailed answer
How CO2 laser can help rhinophyma
Rhinophyma is not simply “large pores”. It is thickening of the nasal skin with enlarged oil glands, fibrous tissue and surface change. CO2 laser works because its energy is absorbed by water in tissue, allowing controlled removal of excess bulk while sealing small blood vessels.
The cellular “why”
Ablative CO2 energy heats water inside the targeted tissue until the overgrown layer is vaporised. In experienced hands this can be used layer by layer to reduce sebaceous and fibrotic bulk while preserving enough healthy tissue for re-epithelialisation, which means new surface skin grows across the treated area.
Layer-by-layer sculpting
Small-vessel sealing
Healing from remaining skin structures
What it treats
CO2 laser may help thickened, bumpy, pitted or bulbous nasal skin caused by rhinophyma. It is most relevant when tissue bulk changes the nasal outline or narrows the nostrils.
What it cannot do
The laser reshapes tissue that is already overgrown. It does not remove the tendency toward rosacea flares, redness, oiliness or future phymatous change without ongoing skin management.
Why diagnosis matters
Rhinophyma can usually be recognised clinically, but suspicious areas may need further assessment. Basal cell carcinoma and other conditions can sometimes mimic or hide within irregular nasal tissue.
Why technique matters
Depth control is central. Too little treatment may leave bulk behind, while excessive heat or overly deep ablation can increase the risk of scarring, pigment change or delayed healing.
A balanced answer
For the right patient, CO2 laser can be a useful way to reduce overgrown tissue, smooth irregular texture and restore a more natural nasal contour. Some people also notice breathing feels easier if enlarged tissue has been narrowing the nostrils.
It is still a clinical procedure with wound care, recovery and risks. The best plan may involve CO2 alone, another laser, electrosurgery, scalpel debulking, dermabrasion or a combined approach depending on severity and anatomy.
Patient safety
Why assessment matters before laser
Rhinophyma is benign in many cases, but changes to the nose can affect comfort, confidence, airflow and skin health. A careful consultation helps separate treatable tissue overgrowth from warning signs that need a different pathway.
Function can be affected
Advanced tissue bulk can narrow the nasal opening, collect crusting or discharge, and make breathing through the nose feel harder for some people.
Stigma is real
Rhinophyma is unfairly linked with alcohol in popular language. It is a rosacea-related skin condition, and women can develop it too, even though it is more common in men.
Healing varies
Skin tone, rosacea activity, smoking, medicines, immune status, menopause-related dryness and general health can all influence recovery and pigment response.
Atypical change needs review
Rapid growth, ulceration, bleeding, asymmetry or a persistent sore area should be assessed before laser, because not every nasal lump is rhinophyma.
The WHC approach: restore contour, protect healing, manage rosacea
Good rhinophyma care is not just removing visible bulk. It also means checking the diagnosis, discussing realistic goals, planning wound care and reducing avoidable triggers for delayed healing or pigment change.
Women may also need a barrier-focused plan if perimenopause or menopause has made the skin drier, more reactive or slower to settle. Hormonal change does not cause rhinophyma by itself, but skin resilience and comfort can shift with oestrogen changes.
Considerations
What to consider before treatment
Before deciding on CO2 laser, the clinician should understand how long the nose has been changing, whether airflow is affected, what rosacea treatments have been tried, and whether the skin is likely to heal predictably.
Treatment choice is individual
CO2 laser is often valued for precision and haemostasis, but severe or bulky rhinophyma may need staged care or a combined method. The aim is a natural-looking contour, not simply aggressive removal.
Skin tone
Airflow
Aftercare support
Consultation and examination
Expect a close examination of the nasal skin, pores, nodules, redness, oiliness and nostril shape. Photographs may be used to plan contour and monitor healing.
Biopsy or referral first
If an area looks ulcerated, bleeds easily, grows quickly or appears unlike typical rhinophyma, the safer first step may be dermatology assessment or biopsy.
Recovery planning
Most people need a period of visible healing with oozing, crusting, swelling and pinkness. Work, social plans, sun exposure and follow-up should be planned around this.
Long-term control
Ongoing rosacea care, gentle skincare, sun protection and trigger management may reduce future inflammatory activity and support the final result.
How the procedure may feel
With local anaesthetic, the nose should feel numb rather than sharp or painful. During treatment there may be pressure, the sound of the laser and suction, and a cautery-like scent as tissue is vaporised and smoke evacuation is used.
Afterwards the surface is intentionally raw, then crusted or moist depending on the dressing plan. A clinic-specific aftercare routine should be followed closely, because picking, drying out the wound or early sun exposure can affect healing.
Common concerns and myths
Common myths about rhinophyma and CO2 laser
The internet can make rhinophyma feel either hopeless or too simple. The truth is more measured: treatment can be very helpful, but it needs diagnosis, technique and aftercare.
“It is caused by alcohol”
This is a harmful myth. Alcohol can trigger flushing in some people with rosacea, but rhinophyma is not proof of alcohol misuse. It reflects skin thickening linked with phymatous rosacea.
“Laser is only cosmetic”
Appearance is one reason people seek help, but advanced rhinophyma can also affect nasal comfort, skin health, odour, crusting and airflow. Functional symptoms should be discussed openly.
“One method suits everyone”
Some noses suit CO2 laser alone. Others may need Erbium refinement, electrosurgery, scalpel debulking or staged care. Skin type, severity and healing risks shape the safest plan.
Will it come back?
Removed tissue is reduced, but rosacea biology can remain active. Recurrence is possible, especially if underlying inflammation is not managed, so follow-up and skin maintenance matter.
Does darker skin rule it out?
Not automatically. Deeper skin tones may have a higher risk of pigment change after ablative laser, so conservative settings, specialist experience and careful aftercare are particularly important.
Safety checklist
A safety checklist before saying yes
Use these questions to guide the consultation. They help make sure the decision is based on diagnosis, suitability and support rather than pressure or embarrassment.
Has the diagnosis been checked?
Ask whether the pattern fits rhinophyma and whether any area looks suspicious enough to need dermatology review or biopsy before laser.
Are the options clear?
You should understand why CO2 laser is being suggested and how it compares with electrosurgery, scalpel reduction, Erbium laser or combined treatment.
Is recovery practical?
Plan for visible healing, wound care, sun avoidance and follow-up. Ask when you can return to work, exercise, makeup and public-facing commitments.
Are red flags covered?
Before leaving clinic, know who to contact for heavy bleeding, worsening pain, pus, fever, sudden swelling, breathing difficulty or delayed healing.
Green flags
Reassuring signs include a clinician who examines the nose carefully, explains alternatives, gives written aftercare and avoids promising a fixed outcome.
Written aftercare
Follow-up plan
Red flags
Pause and seek advice if treatment is offered without assessment, if suspicious lesions are ignored, or if risks such as scarring, infection and pigment change are dismissed.
Ulceration or bleeding
No aftercare plan
When to escalate
When to seek urgent advice
After any ablative laser procedure, some soreness, swelling, oozing and crusting can be expected. Escalate promptly if symptoms are worsening rather than steadily settling, or if you are worried about breathing, infection or bleeding. Use NHS 111 online
Possible infection
Seek medical advice promptly for increasing pain, spreading redness or heat, pus, unpleasant smell, fever, chills or feeling generally unwell.
Bleeding or wound concern
Get urgent advice for heavy bleeding, a wound that opens, blackening tissue, severe swelling, or pain that is not controlled as expected.
Breathing or eye symptoms
Use urgent care pathways if swelling affects breathing, vision, the eye area, or if you develop sudden severe symptoms after treatment.
Suspicious nasal change
Before treatment, a rapidly growing, ulcerated, bleeding or asymmetric lesion should be assessed because skin cancer and other conditions can mimic rhinophyma.
Use NHS 111 for urgent advice or call 999 in a life-threatening emergency, including severe breathing difficulty, collapse, uncontrolled bleeding or rapidly worsening swelling.
Additional questions about CO2 laser and rhinophyma
How long does healing usually take?
Initial surface healing is often measured in the first 1-3 weeks, depending on the depth and extent of treatment. Pinkness or redness can last longer, sometimes for several months. Your clinician should explain the expected healing pattern for your treatment depth and skin type.Can CO2 laser improve breathing?
It may help if excess rhinophyma tissue is narrowing the nostrils or changing the nasal opening. If breathing symptoms are significant, they should be assessed carefully so that structural nasal problems, allergy, polyps or other airway issues are not missed.What aftercare is usually needed?
Aftercare commonly includes gentle cleansing, keeping the wound protected as instructed, avoiding picking, avoiding harsh exfoliants, using sun protection once the skin has healed enough, and attending follow-up. Follow the exact plan given by your treating clinic.Can women develop rhinophyma?
Yes. Rhinophyma is more common in men, but women can develop phymatous rosacea too. Because it is visible and often misunderstood, women may delay seeking help through embarrassment. The condition deserves a respectful clinical assessment.What if I have darker skin?
Darker skin can be treated in some cases, but pigment change risk must be discussed. Conservative technique, careful energy selection, sun avoidance and follow-up are especially important.What about cost?
Fees vary with complexity, treatment area, anaesthetic needs and whether staged care is required. Please check the WHC pricing page or confirm the fee before booking rather than relying on general internet estimates.Regulatory resources
Helpful clinical resources
These external resources support the clinical points in this FAQ and help explain rhinophyma, surgical management and evidence for CO2 laser treatment.
NHS rhinophyma surgical management policy
This NHS commissioning policy explains when surgical management of rhinophyma may be considered and why functional impact matters.
British Association of Dermatologists patient leaflet
This patient leaflet gives a dermatology-led overview of rhinophyma, including symptoms, causes and treatment options.
British Journal of Dermatology CO2 laser review
This clinical review summarises outcomes from a large UK series of patients treated with CO2 laser for rhinophyma.
Next step
Ready to discuss rhinophyma treatment safely?
A consultation can confirm whether the nasal change is rhinophyma, whether CO2 laser is suitable, and what recovery, aftercare and alternatives would look like for your skin and goals.
Educational only. This information supports a consultation and should not replace diagnosis, treatment planning or urgent medical advice when symptoms are severe or changing. Results vary. Not a cure.