To reduce the damage to the upper layers of the skin, surface cooling is directed at the dermo-epidermal junction where the highest amounts of epidermal melanin reside [68]. The heat generated by the laser treatment must be exchanged between the cooling device and skin stratum corneum [69]. Four types of cooling have been developed to cool the skin during laser treatment: Clear gel (usually chilled), contact cooling (through a window cooled by circulating water), cryogen spray (immediately before/after the laser pulse), and air-cooling [71] (Table 8.1). Topically applied gels are the least expensive cooling method [68]. The cooled gels have a smaller temperature gradient than active cooling devices, so only a small amount of heat can be removed from the skin before the temperature gradient decays, and heat transfer ceases. A sapphire window with 2-6°C circulating water is also used to protect the skin from overheating [72]. These types of systems can drop the temperature of the skin’s basal layer by 20°C with a 0.5 s exposure. Evaporative cooling using cryogen sprays has also been used [73,74]. With this method, one is able to create larger temperature gradients between the dermis and epidermis, which allows for greater protection of the epidermis, and reduced risk of inadvertent dermal cooling. For example, the cryogen spray, which is applied for 10-50 ms, followed by the delivery of the laser pulse within 5-10 ms has been used for skin protection. The epidermis is cooled to -10°C for a short period of time (<100 ms), and is limited to cooling to a depth of about 200 um. The cryogen spray relies on the atomization of the spray for uniform dispersal of the droplets; any irregularities in the droplet size may lead to variable localization of the cooling [74]. Although the heat extraction is up to twenty times more efficient than conductive devices, the lack of optical coupling at the skin surface may increase backscatter. In a humid environment, condensation may occur, impeding the subsequent laser pulse.