The ADSS FG900-S serves UK aesthetic clinics, dermatology practices, cosmetic surgery clinics, and multi-disciplinary clinics offering combined skin and gynaecological rejuvenation. The three-mode platform — fractional CO2, continuous CO2, and VRL — covers a wider clinical scope than single-mode CO2 platforms, suiting clinics that run mixed treatment menus across resurfacing, minor cutaneous surgery, and aesthetic gynaecology.
In aesthetic skin resurfacing, the fractional CO2 mode addresses acne scars (rolling, boxcar, and ice-pick subtypes following clinician triage), surgical and traumatic scar revision, stretch marks across abdomen and thighs, photoaging fine lines and wrinkles, post-inflammatory pigmentation, and overall skin texture improvement. Treatment is typically delivered as 1-3 sessions at 4-8 week intervals depending on indication severity and patient downtime tolerance. The clinician selects between single-session aggressive parameters (longer downtime, more dramatic results) and multi-session lower-parameter approaches (shorter per-session downtime, gradual improvement).
For minor cutaneous surgery, the continuous CO2 mode supports skin tag removal, mole and naevus excision, wart and verruca removal, seborrhoeic keratosis ablation, and similar lesion-removal procedures where simultaneous incision and haemostasis save chair-time and reduce bleeding. The continuous mode is also used by some practitioners for blepharoplasty and other oculoplastic work where its precision and haemostatic properties give procedural advantages over conventional steel surgery.
In aesthetic gynaecology, the VRL mode supports vaginal tightening, vulvar pigmentation correction, vaginal mucosa restoration, and adjunctive support for the genitourinary syndrome of menopause symptoms including dryness and dyspareunia. UK clinics offering VRL should ensure operators carry appropriate gynaecological training, that the treatment is performed within a regulated activities framework (CQC or equivalent), and that patient consent specifically addresses the off-label nature of laser gynaecology in some jurisdictions.



