Posten William, Wrone David A, Dover Jeffrey S, Arndt Kenneth A, Silapunt Sirunya, Alam Murad
Department of Dermatology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA.
Dermatol Surg. 2005 Mar;31(3):334-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1524-4725.2005.31086.
Given the recent interest in light-emitting diode (LED) photomodulation and minimally invasive nonablative laser therapies, it is timely to investigate reports that low-level laser therapy (LLLT) may have utility in wound healing.
To critically evaluate reported in vitro models and in vivo animal and human studies and to assess the qualitative and quantitative sufficiency of evidence for the efficacy of LLLT in promoting wound healing.
Literature review, 1965 to 2003.
In examining the effects of LLLT on cell cultures in vitro, some articles report an increase in cell proliferation and collagen production using specific and somewhat arbitrary laser settings with the helium neon (HeNe) and gallium arsenide lasers, but none of the available studies address the mechanism, whether photothermal, photochemical, or photomechanical, whereby LLLT may be exerting its effect. Some studies, especially those using HeNe lasers, report improvements in surgical wound healing in a rodent model; however, these results have not been duplicated in animals such as pigs, which have skin that more closely resembles that of humans. In humans, beneficial effects on superficial wound healing found in small case series have not been replicated in larger studies.
To better understand the utility of LLLT in cutaneous wound healing, good clinical studies that correlate cellular effects and biologic processes are needed. Future studies should be well-controlled investigations with rational selection of lasers and treatment parameters. In the absence of such studies, the literature does not appear to support widespread use of LLLT in wound healing at this time. Although applications of high-energy (10-100 W) lasers are well established with significant supportive literature and widespread use, conflicting studies in the literature have limited low-level laser therapy (LLLT) use in the United States to investigational use only. Yet LLLT is used clinically in many other areas, including Canada, Europe, and Asia, for the treatment of various neurologic, chiropractic, dental, and dermatologic disorders. To understand this discrepancy, it is useful to review the studies on LLLT that have, to date, precluded Food and Drug Administration approval of many such technologies in the United States. The fundamental question is whether there is sufficient evidence to support the use of LLLT.
鉴于近期对发光二极管(LED)光调制和微创非消融激光疗法的关注,及时调查关于低强度激光疗法(LLLT)可能对伤口愈合有用的报道很有必要。
严格评估已报道的体外模型以及体内动物和人体研究,并评估LLLT促进伤口愈合疗效证据的质量和数量是否充分。
1965年至2003年的文献综述。
在研究LLLT对体外细胞培养的影响时,一些文章报道使用特定且有些随意的激光参数,如氦氖(HeNe)激光和砷化镓激光,细胞增殖和胶原蛋白生成有所增加,但现有研究均未探讨LLLT发挥作用的机制,无论是光热、光化学还是光机械机制。一些研究,尤其是使用HeNe激光的研究,报道在啮齿动物模型中手术伤口愈合有所改善;然而,这些结果在皮肤更接近人类的猪等动物身上并未得到重复验证。在人类中,小病例系列中发现的对浅表伤口愈合的有益效果在更大规模的研究中并未得到重现。
为了更好地理解LLLT在皮肤伤口愈合中的作用,需要进行将细胞效应与生物学过程相关联的良好临床研究。未来的研究应该是精心控制的调查,合理选择激光和治疗参数。在缺乏此类研究的情况下,目前的文献似乎不支持LLLT在伤口愈合中的广泛应用。尽管高能(10 - 100瓦)激光的应用有大量支持性文献且广泛使用,但文献中的相互矛盾的研究使得美国仅将低强度激光疗法(LLLT)用于研究用途。然而,LLLT在包括加拿大、欧洲和亚洲在内的许多其他地区临床上用于治疗各种神经、脊椎按摩、牙科和皮肤病。为了理解这种差异,回顾迄今为止导致美国食品药品监督管理局未批准许多此类技术的LLLT研究是有用的。根本问题是是否有足够的证据支持LLLT的使用。