INTRODUCTION
The use of radiofrequency (RF) energy in medicine dates back to the 1920s and went virtually unchanged until the late 1960s. Today, RF is in wide use in the medical and aesthetic fields. In aesthetic medicine RF is harnessed to create a therapeutic thermal effect (thermogenesis) for tissue remodeling
and related indications. The mechanism of action includes collagen cross-link denaturation, partial fibril denaturation, and an inflammatory response inducing the activation of the healing
cascade. While there is an immediate contraction effect, the subsequent inflammatory wound healing response leads to collagen remodeling and more tightening over a period of months, with additional improvement in quality and elasticity. Histologic study by Zelickson and colleagues1 thoroughly documented
these effects; work by Meshkinpour et al.2 revealed upregulated
collagen production at 12 months post-treatment with monopolar RF, highlighting the progressive nature of outcomes as well as their persistence. Work by Paul et al.3 surmised that fuller tissue contracture was the result of deeper thermogenic treatment of the subcutaneous collagenous tissue, versus only superficial treatment of dermal collagen.
Monopolar RF employs a single electrode but requires a return
pad to complete the circuit, while bipolar RF uses pair electrodes and no return pad is needed. Both cause heating
of tissue via impedance with thermal profiles that differ somewhat.
RF has been widely studied for aesthetic indications including wrinkles, facial laxity, brow lifting, nasolabial folding,
acne, and scarring as well as general skin tightening,4 with emerging investigation for use on the body for recontouring.3,5
Most RF treatments involve external application of energy; for transcutaneous methods cryogen cooling is often used to protect
the epidermis while heat is deposited more deeply for a therapeutic effect. Percutaneous radiofrequency tightening allows
practitioners to deliver energy directly to the target tissue; as long as nearby tissue and tissue structures remain relatively undamaged and discomfort is tolerable, this is therapeutically ideal because outcomes using transcutaneous methods are limited to the upper dermis and epidermis, failing to address the complex network of collagenous tissues of the dermis and hypodermis, down to the fascia.6-7 Demonstrable efficacy for submental recontouring has been noted using a novel RF technology for percutaneous subdermal heating5 which delivers
energy directly to the dermis and subdermis. The device, called ThermiRF (Thermi, Irving, TX), combines monopolar RF with real-time thermistor feedback control and the option of using concurrent external infrared tissue temperature monitoring
shown effective for thermoregulation in a previous study,8