Lipo 360 Godalming, we understand that skin issues such as angiofibromas can impact your self-esteem and quality of life. Angiofibromas Godalming are small, benign (non-cancerous) growths on the skin that usually present as firm papules, which may be flesh-coloured or reddish and are often found around the nose, cheeks, and chin.
Angiofibromas are overgrowths of fibrous tissue and blood vessels that can occur in both children and adults. While usually benign, they may cause cosmetic issues or pain if left untreated for years. Although sometimes linked to diseases, most plaques and lesions arise randomly and are harmless.
If you have been noticing these growths growing in size or changing in appearance and color, then it would be a wise decision to go for professional Treatment with the experts Lipo 360 Godalming.
With Lipo 360 Godalming, both our specialist and safe angiofibroma removal techniques are customizable to demand from your skin kind and aspires the treatment goals. Any recommended approach will vary depending on the size, number, and location of your lesions AND whether you have other skin problems. Treatment for Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis commonly used and are effective include:
1. Laser Therapy: A targeted treatment typically aimed at the blood vessels within angiofibroma, which shatters them without scarring the bordered skin areas.
2. Radiofrequency Ablation: This is a method that destroys growths through the application of controlled heat, and it suits many or larger lesions.
3. Colposcopy with cryotherapy: Liquid Nitrogen is used to freeze the lesion, and it peels away over time.
4. Surgical excision: Surgical excision with local anaesthesia may be the most appropriate option, especially where lesions are more symptomatic or recalcitrant.
Each is carried out with cutting-edge methodologies for better, more efficient, and quality-assured results.
The benefits of selecting Angiofibroma Treatment provided by skilled specialists are two-fold (both cosmetic and personal):
Q: How does Cryopen selectively destroy angiofibromas?
Cryopen freezes the lesion to -40°C, causing targeted cell death in fibroblasts and blood vessels while leaving surrounding skin intact.
Q: Why are angiofibromas vascular and fibrous, and how does this affect treatment?
They contain dense collagen and capillaries. Lasers target vessels, while Cryopen or RF ablation effectively disrupts fibrous tissue, optimising removal.
Q: How does lesion size and depth influence treatment choice?
Small, superficial lesions respond to Cryopen or laser, while deeper or fibrotic ones may need RF ablation or surgical excision for complete removal.
Q: Why do some angiofibromas need multiple Cryopen sessions?
Dense or highly vascular lesions may retain viable cells after one session, requiring follow-up to achieve full regression.
Q: How does laser therapy reduce post-inflammatory pigmentation risk?
Lasers target haemoglobin in lesion vessels without harming melanocytes, minimising inflammation and pigment changes.
Q: How does RF ablation treat clustered lesions precisely?
Controlled heat from microelectrodes ablates each lesion individually, preserving intervening skin and avoiding merged wounds.
Q: What happens to the fibrous component during cryotherapy?
Cryotherapy induces fibroblast and endothelial cell death, partially collapsing collagen within the lesion while preserving surrounding dermal structures.
Q: Are there locations where angiofibromas are more resistant?
Yes. Nasolabial folds and perinasal skin are thicker and vascular, often requiring multiple sessions or combined treatments.
Q: How is treatment adapted for Tuberous Sclerosis Complex patients?
Multiple, dense lesions require staged Cryopen, laser, or RF sessions to minimise tissue trauma and recurrence risk.
Q: What determines post-treatment healing time?
Vascular density, fibrous thickness, and lesion age affect healing. Dense lesions may form crusts that slough over 7–14 days.
Q: How is recurrence minimised after treatment?
Complete ablation of fibrovascular tissue and follow-up sessions ensure residual cells are destroyed, reducing regrowth risk.
Q: When is surgical excision preferred?
Surgery is best for large, symptomatic, ulcerated, or fibrotic lesions where non-invasive methods may be incomplete, providing immediate, precise results.