Guest guest Posted May 16, 2002 Report Share Posted May 16, 2002 Tonight, 9pm, only on Pay-per-view. Call your local cable operator or satellite provider for details. Heh, too much coffee this morning. Anyway, I'll try to keep this email short. This is mainly for the benefit of anyone considering Dr. Lindyberg, and future members of the list searching the archives. Starting last October, I did three photofacial sessions with Dr. Ritchie in Knoxville TN, and then followed that up with four sessions with Lindyberg in Baltimore. I switched to Lindyberg due to the fact that Ritchie is a 500 mile drive (one way) from my home. Both are Bitter Sr.-trained, and I think both are very good with the photoderm machine. I'm satisfied with the results. I have a mild-moderate case of rosacea to begin with. Redness and flushing on cheeks and nose, some telengectasia in the middle of cheeks. No pustules/paules, no swelling, no occular. I just looked permamently sunburned. I think the largest difference between these two doctors is the price per treatment... but I'll get to that later. Dr. Lindyberg performs all the treatments himself, with the help of his nurse. He follows the Bitter protocol very closely, so closely that I got the impression he does exactly the same routine on all photofacial patients... but I could be wrong on that. He did three passes on me all four treatments: the 550 filter, then 570, then 590. Each pass consists of roughly 8-10 zaps on the left cheek, then 5-7 on the nose, then 8-10 on the right cheek. Very methodical. He did tell me the exact settings he used (which I believe is Bitter's protocol), but he trusted I wouldn't tell anyone, so I won't. Lindyberg is not a fan of using the numbing cream (lidocaine/elemax). Since Ritchie always uses the numbing cream, I asked Lindyberg about it during the first session, he said he didn't have any on hand, and doesn't use it, because it can cause vasocontriction which can lead to big problems. During the second treatment, he said he had the numbing cream and would be happy to put some on for me. I thought it seemed odd, so I declined. Interestingly, Ritchie did the 550 on me during only one of the three treatments. He said he was worried about bruising and damaging skin. Lindyberg seems to think the 550 is one of the most effective filters, and showed me fancy graphs to prove such. My first treatment with Lindyberg, the zaps seemed pretty painful. But I think a lot of that was just not being familiar with his rhythm. With Dr. Ritchie, he put on the cold gel over the entire cheek, then started zapping away, at 3 or 4 second intervals. Lindyberg's approach is put on a small amount of cold gel, then zap, then put on more cold gel, then zap, etc. I asked him about this, and he said it was very important to put on the gel right before the zap to prevent overheating. Lindyberg did the same three filters all four times, at the same power (fluence), but did lower the delay in the final treatments. Ritchie's approach seemed much more holistic... he just kind of looks at you that day and does what he needs to do. Kind of like a sculptor looking at a piece of stone. Each pass with Ritchie was about twice as many zaps as with Lindyberg. Both doctors are very nice, friendly personalities. Both have elegant offices, friendly staff. Ah, the money factor. As is well documented, Dr. Ritchie charges $175 per treatment. Dr. Lindyberg's standard price is $475, which drops a little lower if you buy a 3-pack, or a 5-pack. In Ritchie's office, you pay after treatment, on your way out. Lindyberg won't do treatment until you pay upfront. My original idea was to do a treatment with Lindyberg, and if I was satisified, buy a 3-pack. But no, I had to buy the 3-pack upfront ($1350). Based on my treatments, Ritchie charged about $1.50 per zap, Lindyberg charged about $6.00 per zap. I don't mean any of this to suggest Lindyberg is a rip-off; From what I've read, it seems Ritchie is the anomaly. If money is no object, I'd recommend Lindyberg easily. If you're like me, just finished school and starting out, it's a tougher decision. In terms of redness and puffiness after treatments, the two doctors are about the same. Neither one ever bruised or burned me, and both were very concerned about side-effects, and making sure I was happy. Ritchie didn't make a big deal about how long I should go between appointments. Lindyberg stressed that 3 weeks between treatments is very important to overall success. To summarize, I would describe Ritchie as intuitive and confident with the laser, and Lindyberg is " by the book " . I'll post again in a couple months and report on what I feel are the lasting effects of photoderm. All the telegectasia is gone. The percentage of days where I am not self-consious of redness has doubled. However, in the back of my mind, I wonder how much of photoderm improvement is " placebo effect " . I compeltely agree with Rick when he asks " where are the studies? where's the proof? " . This is why insurance companies rarely cover photoderm. Take care all, -G Washington Virginia land __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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