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Flushing Lasers | Why They Are Infamously Known for Being Ineffective


Treatments commonly referred to as “flushing lasers” mean vascular lasers such as Vbeam and Excel V.

During consultations, I often meet patients who say they have received these lasers multiple times without any effect, or that their skin became redder or started flushing more frequently. Conversely, some patients experience significant improvement after only one or two sessions.

The reason the results can differ so much even with the same vascular laser for the same flushing is that there are various causes of flushing.

If you decide to get a vascular laser based only on the symptom of flushing, you may end up trying to treat causes that the laser cannot improve with the laser itself.

Medical illustration comparing the three causes of flushing—inflammation, neurovascular hypersensitivity, and telangiectasia—on the same face

Common Reasons Flushing Occurs


Flushing is a general term for symptoms in which the skin appears red. However, the main causes of flushing—inflammation, neurovascular hypersensitivity, and telangiectasia—each respond differently to treatment.

CausePrimary AppearanceRole of Flushing Lasers
InflammationRed even at rest, with itching or stinging; scaling; or red, bumpy patchesCannot treat the inflammation itself
Neurovascular HypersensitivityThe face suddenly becomes intensely red due to heat, stress, alcohol, or spicy foodCannot treat neurovascular hypersensitivity itself
TelangiectasiaFine blood vessels remain visible on the sides of the nose or cheeksCan directly reduce telangiectasia

The first cause is inflammation. This is more likely when flushing is accompanied by itching or stinging, scaling, or red, bumpy patches. For this type of flushing, treating inflammation and the skin barrier comes before vascular lasers.

The second cause is neurovascular hypersensitivity. The skin has a kind of sensor called TRPV1 that detects stimuli such as heat and spiciness. In rosacea, where flushing and telangiectasia primarily appear, studies have reported increased TRPV1 gene expression compared to normal skin.1 A typical example is when the face suddenly flushes intensely upon entering a warm place or when feeling nervous, despite being fine otherwise.

The third cause is telangiectasia. This is a state where fine blood vessels remain visible on the sides of the nose and cheeks. Telangiectasia is what vascular lasers directly target.

All three can appear together in the same person.

What Flushing Lasers Can Treat


Vascular lasers such as Vbeam and Excel V emit light that is absorbed by hemoglobin in the blood vessels. The principle is that the light converts into heat, reducing telangiectasia. I have summarized the differences between these two devices in a separate article, Comparison of Vbeam and Excel V.

Medical cross-sectional skin illustration showing how a flushing laser (vascular laser) is absorbed by hemoglobin in telangiectasia, converts to heat, and reduces blood vessels

Among types of flushing, vascular lasers help most directly with flushing caused by telangiectasia. A meta-analysis combining multiple clinical trials also evaluated vascular lasers as helpful for reducing telangiectasia.2

There are reports that they also help diffuse erythema, where the entire face is evenly red without clear borders, but my clinical experience is somewhat different. If telangiectasia is prominent along with diffuse erythema, the overall redness lightens as telangiectasia decreases. However, if there is only inflammation or neurovascular hypersensitivity without telangiectasia, there is no target for the laser to reduce, so it provides little benefit and may even worsen symptoms.

Cases Where Flushing Worsens After Laser Treatment


Because vascular lasers deliver heat to the skin, redness, swelling, and stinging can occur immediately after the procedure. In my experience, these irritations tend to last longer in people who already have severe inflammation or a damaged skin barrier.

The anesthetic cream used before the procedure can also be problematic. Anesthetic creams containing lidocaine and prilocaine can cause not only temporary redness but also irritant dermatitis and allergic contact dermatitis.3

In various chronic dermatitis conditions, an increase in TRPV1—the skin’s heat sensor—has been observed, making the skin more sensitive to stimuli such as heat.4,5 There are no direct studies showing that lasers increase TRPV1, but if inflammation triggered by irritation from the laser or anesthetic cream persists for a long time, it is presumed that the process of increasing TRPV1 may be involved.

Therefore, if redness is still severe even 1–2 weeks after the procedure, it is better to reassess the cause of flushing rather than repeating the laser right away.

Checking for Telangiectasia with Polarized Dermoscopy


When flushing is present, it is not easy to determine with the naked eye whether telangiectasia is present. This is because telangiectasia is often obscured by flushing and hard to see.

This is where polarized dermoscopy is very useful. By minimizing light reflected from the skin surface and magnifying the skin, polarized dermoscopy allows you to check whether telangiectasia can be observed over the reddened skin.

Photo comparing diffuse erythema with no visible fine vessels and telangiectasia with a distinct red vascular network on polarized dermoscopy

Because flushing does not have a single cause, whether flushing lasers will help depends on whether telangiectasia is actually present. If inflammation or neurovascular hypersensitivity is the main cause, the treatment may be ineffective or even worsen symptoms. That is why, before deciding on flushing lasers, it is better to check with polarized dermoscopy whether telangiectasia is present.


References


Can I receive flushing laser treatment if I have flushing?

First, you need to confirm whether the cause of flushing is telangiectasia. If you only have inflammation or neurovascular hypersensitivity and no telangiectasia, it is difficult to expect vascular lasers to be effective.

If I can see fine blood vessels on my face, will flushing lasers work well?

If the persistently visible fine vessels are confirmed as telangiectasia, they are a target that vascular lasers can directly reduce. However, not all visible fine vessels are telangiectasia, so confirmation is needed first.

What should I do if my skin becomes redder and burns after a flushing laser?

It is necessary to distinguish whether it is a temporary reaction immediately after the procedure or a state where inflammation and skin barrier damage are persisting. Rather than repeating the laser treatment immediately, it is better to re-check the current inflammation and telangiectasia.

What is checked with polarized dermoscopy?

By magnifying the skin, it distinguishes diffuse erythema from telangiectasia. It helps determine whether telangiectasia is present, which is what vascular lasers can directly reduce.