Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic, University of California, Irvine, 1002 Health Sciences Rd. East, Irvine, CA, 92612, USA,
Lasers Med Sci. 2013 Nov;28(6):1475-82. doi: 10.1007/s10103-012-1250-9. Epub 2013 Jan 10.
Laser cartilage reshaping (LCR) with cryogen spray cooling is a promising modality for producing cartilage shape change while reducing cutaneous thermal injury. However, LCR in thicker tissues, such as auricular cartilage, requires higher laser power, thus increasing cooling requirements. To eliminate the risks of freeze injury characteristic of high cryogen spray pulse rates, a carbon dioxide (CO2) spray, which evaporates rapidly from the skin, has been proposed as the cooling medium. This study aims to identify parameter sets which produce clinically significant reshaping while producing minimal skin thermal injury in LCR with CO2 spray cooling in ex vivo rabbit auricular cartilage. Excised whole rabbit ears were mechanically deformed around a cylindrical jig and irradiated with a 1.45-μm wavelength diode laser (fluence 12-14 J/cm(2) per pulse, four to six pulse cycles per irradiation site, five to six irradiation sites per row for four rows on each sample) with concomitant application of CO2 spray (pulse duration 33-85 ms) to the skin surface. Bend angle measurements were performed before and after irradiation, and the change quantified. Surface temperature distributions were measured during irradiation/cooling. Maximum skin surface temperature ranged between 49.0 to 97.6 °C following four heating/cooling cycles. Significant reshaping was achieved with all laser dosimetry values with a 50-70 °C difference noted between controls (no cooling) and irradiated ears. Increasing cooling pulse duration yielded progressively improved gross skin protection during irradiation. CO2 spray cooling may potentially serve as an alternative to traditional cryogen spray cooling in LCR and may be the preferred cooling medium for thicker tissues. Future studies evaluating preclinical efficacy in an in vivo rabbit model are in progress.
激光软骨重塑(LCR)结合冷冻喷雾冷却技术是一种很有前途的方法,可在减少皮肤热损伤的同时改变软骨形状。然而,在较厚的组织(如耳廓软骨)中进行 LCR 需要更高的激光功率,从而增加冷却要求。为了消除高冷冻喷雾脉冲率下特有的冻伤风险,提出了一种二氧化碳(CO2)喷雾作为冷却介质,其从皮肤迅速蒸发。本研究旨在确定在 CO2 喷雾冷却下进行 LCR 时,产生临床显著重塑效果同时最小化皮肤热损伤的参数组合。离体兔耳被机械变形围绕圆柱形夹具,并用 1.45μm 波长二极管激光照射(每个脉冲的激光能量为 12-14J/cm2,每个照射部位照射四到六个脉冲周期,每排五个到六个照射部位,每个样本共四排),同时将 CO2 喷雾(脉冲持续时间 33-85ms)应用于皮肤表面。照射前后进行弯曲角度测量,并对变化进行量化。在照射/冷却过程中测量表面温度分布。在进行四个加热/冷却循环后,皮肤表面的最高温度范围在 49.0 到 97.6°C 之间。所有激光剂量值都能显著重塑,与未冷却(对照)和照射耳朵之间的 50-70°C 差异显著。增加冷却脉冲持续时间可在照射过程中逐渐改善皮肤的整体保护效果。CO2 喷雾冷却可能是 LCR 中传统冷冻喷雾冷却的替代方法,并且可能是较厚组织的首选冷却介质。目前正在进行评估体内兔模型临床前疗效的未来研究。