TL;DR: Modern medical aesthetics rests on three core energy families: light (lasers + IPL), electromagnetic (radiofrequency), and sound (focused ultrasound — HIFU/LIFU). Each group targets a different chromophore, depth, and clinical concern. Correct device selection is driven by skin type, target problem, downtime tolerance, and contraindications.
Who this guide is for
If you've already had laser hair removal and are wondering what comes next; if you're researching solutions for melasma, acne scars, or skin tightening; or if you're trying to make sense of clinic names like Fotona, Alma, Cynosure, Lutronic, Ulthera, and Inmode — this is your overview. The content is grounded in FDA/EMA approvals, the Turkish Ministry of Health framework, and 30+ years of clinical experience.
1. What is an energy-based device?
Energy-based devices (EBDs) are medical systems that deliver controlled energy to a target tissue to trigger a selective biological response. No surgical incision; the effect comes from energy absorbed by specific tissue components.
Three core energy types:
| Energy | Devices | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Light (photon) | Laser, IPL, BBL | Melanin, hemoglobin, water, collagen |
| Electromagnetic | RF (mono/bi/multipolar), gold-needle RF | Dermis, fascia, collagen |
| Sound (acoustic) | HIFU, LIFU | SMAS, deep dermis, fat |
| Mechanical (adjunct) | Acoustic shockwave, cavitation | Fat, fibrotic tissue |
Selective photothermolysis
Defined by Anderson and Parrish in 1983, selective photothermolysis underpins modern laser aesthetics: right wavelength + right pulse duration + right energy = only the target structure heats up, surrounding tissue is preserved.
2. The three energy families
A. Light energy (laser + IPL)
Laser = Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Single wavelength, coherent, collimated. IPL = Intense Pulsed Light; broad-spectrum (400–1200 nm), filterable polychromatic light.
Clinical wavelengths:
- 532 nm (KTP) — superficial vessels, erythema, red tattoo
- 595 nm (Pulsed Dye) — vascular lesions, port-wine stain
- 694 nm (Ruby) — blue/black tattoo
- 755 nm (Alexandrite) — hair removal, pigmented lesions
- 810/940 nm (Diode) — hair removal, vascular
- 1064 nm (Nd:YAG) — deep hair removal (safe in dark skin), vascular, tattoo
- 1320/1440/1550 nm (non-ablative fractional) — collagen renewal
- 1927 nm (Thulium) — pigment + superficial tissue
- 2940 nm (Erbium:YAG) — ablative superficial resurfacing
- 10,600 nm (CO2) — ablative deep resurfacing
B. Electromagnetic energy (RF)
RF uses alternating current to generate heat via ion motion in tissue. Unlike light, RF is independent of skin pigment — safe across all Fitzpatrick types.
Types:
- Monopolar RF — deep (4–7 mm), single applicator + ground pad
- Bipolar RF — superficial-mid (2–4 mm), two electrodes
- Multipolar RF — more homogeneous heating
- Fractional RF (microneedle) — gold-tipped needles pierce dermis and deliver energy at depth; strongest collagen response
C. Sound energy (HIFU / LIFU)
Focused ultrasound passes through the skin surface and creates microscopic coagulation points at depth — the skin surface is undisturbed while deeper layers (SMAS, deep dermis) heat.
- HIFU (High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound) — point coagulation at 1.5 / 3.0 / 4.5 mm
- LIFU (Linear Intensive Focused Ultrasound) — linear pattern fat lysis + skin tightening
D. IPL/BBL
Broad-spectrum light, filterable to target multiple chromophores in one session. BBL is the premium IPL evolution (Sciton).
3. Which device for which problem?
Devices aren't selected by brand name — they're selected by chromophore + depth + target.
| Problem | First-choice | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Dynamic wrinkles | Botox | — |
| Fine lines, weak tissue | Fractional CO2 / Erbium / 1550 | RF microneedle |
| Moderate skin tightening | Bipolar/multipolar RF | HIFU |
| Significant sagging | HIFU | LIFU |
| Local fat | LIFU / cryolipolysis | Injection lipolysis |
| Melasma | Low-dose Q-switch + topical | Thulium 1927 |
| Solar lentigo | Q-switch Nd:YAG / Alexandrite | IPL/BBL |
| Erythema, rosacea | KTP 532 / PDL / BBL | — |
| Atrophic acne scars | Fractional CO2 | RF microneedle |
| Hair removal — dark skin | Nd:YAG 1064 | — |
| Hair removal — light skin | Alexandrite 755 | Diode 810 |
| Tattoo (black/blue) | Q-switch 1064 | Picosecond |
4. Seven decision questions
- What's the target? Pigment? Redness? Tissue? Volume? Sagging?
- Skin type (Fitzpatrick)? Wavelength is critical in dark skin.
- Age + skin condition? Younger skin needs less energy.
- What depth? Superficial (IPL/Erbium), mid (1550 / RF), deep (HIFU).
- Downtime tolerance? Ablative laser = 5–10 days.
- Contraindications? Active infection, isotretinoin, pregnancy, certain wavelengths in dark skin, keloid tendency.
- Realistic expectations? Most devices need 3–6 sessions.
5. Safety and regulation
In Türkiye, aesthetic energy-based devices must be registered with the Ministry of Health, CE or FDA-approved, and administered only by a physician. Unlicensed use carries risk of permanent hypopigmentation, scarring, infection, and ocular injury.
6. Our clinic approach
- AI-assisted skin analysis for objective baseline
- Patient skin type (Fitzpatrick) + UV exposure history
- CE/FDA-approved devices, certified operation
- Combined planning — not a single device but the right stack (RF + mesotherapy, HIFU + filler, BBL + glutathione)
- Annual integrated calendar by season
7. FAQ
Laser vs IPL for hair removal? Lasers (Alex, Diode, Nd:YAG) outperform IPL for hair removal. IPL is more for pigment/redness.
Pregnancy? No. All energy-based devices are postponed.
Single session? Rarely. Most devices need 3–6 sessions; annual maintenance.
Summer? Some yes (with strict SPF50+); ablative laser and Q-switch pigment work better in autumn-winter.
On isotretinoin? Ablative laser and deep resurfacing — wait 6 months after stopping isotretinoin. Other devices: physician-evaluated.
Conclusion
Modern medical aesthetics is unthinkable without energy-based devices. The right device is chosen at the chromophore + depth + patient intersection. The follow-up guides in this series take each device one by one.
Dr. Murat Toktamısoglu, MD, PhD — Ataşehir, Istanbul. WhatsApp: +90 533 356 2480. Last medical review: May 18, 2026.


