Abstract

Background and Objective Higher laser fluences than currently used in therapy (5–10 J/cm2) are expected to result in more effective treatment of port wine stain (PWS) birthmarks. However, higher incident fluences increase the risk of epidermal damage caused by absorption of light by melanin. Cryogen spray cooling offers an effective method to reduce epidermal injury during laser irradiation. The objective of this study was to determine whether high laser incident fluences (15–30 J/cm2) could be used while still protecting the epidermis in ex vivo human skin samples. Study Design/Materials and Methods Non-PWS skin from a human cadaver was irradiated with a Candela ScleroPlus™ Laser (λ = 585 nm; pulse duration = 1.5 msec) by using various incident fluences (8–30 J/cm2) without and with cryogen spray cooling (refrigerant R-134a; spurt durations: 40–250 msec). Assessment of epidermal damage was based on histologic analysis. Results Relatively short spurt durations (40–100 msec) protected the epidermis for laser incident fluences comparable to current therapeutic levels (8–10 J/cm2). However, longer spurt durations (100–250 msec) increased the fluence threshold for epidermal damage by a factor of three (up to 30 J/cm2) in these ex vivo samples. Conclusion Results of this ex vivo study show that epidermal protection from high laser incident fluences can be achieved by increasing the cryogen spurt duration immediately before pulsed laser exposure. Lasers Surg. Med. 27:373–383, 2000. © 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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