Plastic surgery news and articles. Cosmetic surgery.
Firm says its new device can identify problem areas on face early CHARLOTTE, N.C. - The mir... This scanner could save your ski
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - The mirror on the wall might be able to tell who's the fairest of them all, but BrighTex Bio-Photonics LLC's scanner can tell a whole lot more.
Applying technology used for inspecting semiconductor wafers for defects, BrighTex developed the Clarity Pro facial image scanner, which claims to identify bacteria-clogging pores, show where wrinkles are forming and identify skin damage caused by the sun.
The scanner is the size of a TV set, with a large oval cavity for the user's face. Targeted at beauty spas, dermatologists and cosmetic companies, the scanner sells for $20,000. A handful of unidentified cosmetic companies have bought it so far.
There are other products on the market that show where sun damage has occurred, but Rajeshwar Chhibber, founder and chief executive of BrighTex, said nothing available today can provide the amount of detail Clarity Pro does.
After taking a white light and UV image of a person's face, that image is entered into a software program to detect damage. In the case of clogged pores, Clarity Pro can identify what type of bacteria is in the pores and predict where acne will form.
For sun damage, the facial scanner can tell how much damage is under the skin, how long a person can stay in sun before the skin is damaged more and forecast the chances of a person getting skin cancer caused by harmful UV rays.
Chhibber, who founded the company in January 2005, comes from a semiconductor background and said the leap from detecting defects in wafers to defects in faces wasn't that big. "To me inspecting a face or a wafer is very similar," he said, since in both cases you have to look for the tiniest of defects.
Clarity Pro can also be used to monitor the progress of a particular facial cream to see if it is reducing wrinkles or improving sun damage. For the cosmetics field, Chhibber said a future product will be targeted toward research and development departments and may result in better creams and lotions.
John Bailey, executive vice president of science at the Washington-based Cosmetic Toiletry and Fragrance Association and former director of the Food and Drug Administration's cosmetics and colors office, said if BrighTex's technology does work, it would be valuable for the cosmetic industry, which is always looking for ways to develop better products.
Still, Bailey noted that like other facial scanning products on the market for skin analysis, Clarity Pro would need to be validated to prove it can truly predict problems with the skin.
BrighTex said that today the market size is $70 million to $100 million worldwide. That has the potential to grow to a billion-dollar-plus market over the next three years.
The Clarity Pro product comes at a time when Americans are much more aware of sun damage and are paying more attention to skin care. It also comes against a backdrop of rising cases of skin cancer in America.
According to the Skin Cancer Foundation, more than 1.5 million skin cancers are diagnosed each year in the United States. Nationally, there are more new cases of skin cancer each year than the combined incidence of breast, prostate, lung and colon cancers. The incidence of melanoma, which is the deadliest form of skin cancer, is increasing faster than any other cancer.
"Any technique that is going to lead to early detection of skin cancer is going to save lives and save the need for more extensive radical surgery," said Goldberg, noting that consumers will likely want a product that can give a detailed skin analysis at home.
This is cache, read story here
