Abstract

We investigated the effect of low-power laser irradiation on the survival of experimental skin flaps in rats. A gallium-aluminum-arsenide diode laser that was developed by the Japan Medical Laser Laboratory was used. The laser power was 15 mW and the wavelength 830 nm. Irradiation was carried out, either before or after flap elevation, in two groups of 20 Wistar strain rats. A third group of 20 rats served as controls. A caudally based skin flap, 3 X 9 cm, was designed on the back of each rat. Laser irradiation therapy was performed for 5 consecutive days for 6 minutes per flap per day, preoperatively in one group and postoperatively in the other. Seven days postoperatively, the survival areas of the flaps were measured and compared. The survival area was increased significantly in both groups receiving laser therapy, probably due to the observed proliferation of blood vessels around the irradiated points and an increase in blood flow.

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