Abstract
In many port wine stain (PWS) patients, successful clearing is not achieved even after multiple laser treatments because of inadequate heat generation within the targeted blood vessels. Use of higher radiant exposures has been suggested to improve lesion clearing, but risk of epidermal injury due to nonspecific absorption by melanin increases. It has been demonstrated that cryogen spray cooling (CSC) can protect the epidermis from nonspecific thermal injury during laser treatment of PWS. Inasmuch as epidermal melanin concentration and blood vessel depth vary among patients, evaluation of internal skin temperatures in response to CSC is essential for further development and optimization of treatment parameters on an individual patient basis. We present internal temperature measurements in an epoxy resin phantom in response to CSC and use the results in conjunction with a mathematical model to predict the temperature distribution within human skin for various cooling parameters. Measurements on the epoxy resin phantom show that cryogen film temperature is well below the cryogen boiling point, but a poor thermal contact exists at the cryogen-phantom interface. Based on phantom measurements and model predictions, internal skin temperature reduction remains confined to the upper 400 /spl mu/m for spurt durations as long as 200 ms. At the end of a 100 ms spurt, our results show a 31/spl deg/C temperature reduction at the surface, 12/spl deg/C at a depth of 100 /spl mu/m, and 4/spl deg/C at a depth of 200 /spl mu/m in human skin. Analysis of estimated temperature distributions in response to CSC and temperature profiles obtained by pulsed photothermal radiometry indicates that a significant protective effect is achieved at the surface of laser irradiated PWS skin. Protection of the epidermal basal layer, however, poses a greater challenge when high radiant exposures are used.
Highlights
LIGHT EMITTED from a flashlamp-pumped pulsed dye laser (FLPPDL) at wavelength of 577 or 585 nm is currently used to treat port wine stains (PWS)
Since we used infrared radiometry in human skin to correlate with temperatures from an epoxy resin phantom, we present the model used for estimation of radiometric temperatures in skin
Since epidermal melanin concentration and blood vessel depth vary among patients, evaluation of internal skin temperatures in response to cryogen spray cooling (CSC) is essential for further development and optimization of treatment parameters on an individual patient basis
Summary
LIGHT EMITTED from a flashlamp-pumped pulsed dye laser (FLPPDL) at wavelength of 577 or 585 nm is currently used to treat port wine stains (PWS). The 7–10 J/cm radiant exposure, and 0.45–0.5-ms pulse duration employed with the FLPPDL may be insufficient to produce and sustain the critical core temperature necessary to destroy large PWS vessels. Various investigators have suggested use of higher laser fluences and/or longer laser exposure times to produce irreversible injury of large PWS vessels [3]–[5]. Such increased dosimetry will result in greater heat generated within the epidermis which can lead to complications such as hypertrophic scarring, atrophy, induration, or dyspigmentation
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More From: IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics
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