https://www.selleckchem.com/products/l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine.html Ablative fractionated carbon dioxide (fCO2 ) laser may be a useful tool to improve noticeable scars after skin cancer surgery. Therefore we evaluated 40 patients who have been treated with fCO2 laser for facial scars after skin cancer surgery. This retrospective study is based on blinded evaluation of pre- and postoperative photographs. Patients (n = 40), laypersons (n = 5) and experts (n = 5) evaluated the esthetics and the Vancouver scar scale as primary endpoints. Secondary endpoints included patient satisfaction and treatment safety. Patients, laypersons and experts consistently assessed a significant improvement of scar quality and appearance after fCO2 laser treatment, which was paralleled by high patient satisfaction. In conclusion, ablative fCO2 laser is effective in improving noticeable postsurgical scars. Patients are highly satisfied with post-laser results.This article was published whilst it was still in peer review due to a technical error at the publisher and has been temporarily removed. To develop an essential oil (EO)-loaded textile coating using an environmentally friendly microemulsion technique to achieve both antimicrobial and mosquito repellent functionalities. Minimum inhibitory concentrations and fractional inhibitory concentrations of litsea, lemon and rosemary EOs were determined against Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Trichophyton rubrum. A 12 mixture of litsea and lemon EOs inhibited all the microorganisms tested and was incorporated into a chitosan-sodium alginate assembly by a microemulsification process. The EO-loaded microemulsions were applied to cotton and polyester fabrics using a soak-pad-dry method. The textile challenge tests demonstrated 7-8 log reductions of S. epidermidis, S. aureus and E. coli after 24h and T. rubrum after 48h. Aedes aegypti mosquito repellency was also assessed which demonst