Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology (HST), Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Lasers Surg Med. 2023 Jan;55(1):116-125. doi: 10.1002/lsm.23557. Epub 2022 May 21.
Cryolipolysis uses tissue cooling to solidify lipids, preferentially damaging lipid-rich cells. Topical cooling is popular for the reduction of local subcutaneous fat. Injection of biocompatible ice-slurry is a recently introduced alternative. We developed and verified a quantitative model that simulates the heat exchange and phase changes involved, offering insights into ice-slurry injection for treating subcutaneous fat.
Finite element method was used to model the spatial and temporal progression of heat transfer between adipose tissue and injected ice-slurry, estimating dose-response relationships between properties of the slurry and size of tissue affected by cryolipolysis. Phase changes of both slurry and adipose tissue lipids were considered. An in vivo swine model was used to validate the numerical solutions. Oils with different lipid compositions were exposed to ice-slurry in vitro to evaluate the effects of lipid freezing temperature. Microscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were performed to detect lipid phase changes.
A ball of granular ice was deposited at the injection site in subcutaneous fat. Total injected ice content determines both the effective cooling region of tissue, and the duration of tissue cooling. Water's high latent heat of fusion enables tissue cooling long after slurry injection. Slurry temperature affects the rate of tissue cooling. In swine, when 30 ml slurry injection at -3.5°C was compared to 15 ml slurry injection at -4.8°C (both with the same total ice content), the latter led to almost twice faster tissue cooling. NMR showed a large decrease in diffusion upon lipid crystallization; saturated lipids with higher freezing temperatures were more susceptible to solidification after ice-slurry injection.
Total injected ice content determines both the volume of tissue treated by cryolipolysis and the cooling duration after slurry injection, while slurry temperature affects the cooling rate. Lipid saturation, which varies with diet and anatomic location, also has an important influence.
冷冻溶脂利用组织冷却使脂质固化,优先破坏富含脂质的细胞。局部皮下脂肪减少时,常采用表面冷却。最近引入了一种替代方法,即注射生物相容性的冰泥。我们开发并验证了一个定量模型,模拟了涉及的热交换和相变,为治疗皮下脂肪的冰泥注射提供了深入了解。
有限元法用于模拟脂肪组织与注射冰泥之间的传热空间和时间进程,估算了冰泥特性与受冷冻溶脂影响的组织大小之间的剂量反应关系。考虑了冰泥和脂肪组织脂质的相变。使用体内猪模型验证了数值解。在体外将具有不同脂质成分的油暴露于冰泥中,以评估脂质冷冻温度的影响。进行了显微镜检查和核磁共振(NMR)以检测脂质相变化。
在皮下脂肪的注射部位沉积了一个冰球颗粒。总注入冰量决定了组织的有效冷却区域以及组织冷却的持续时间。水的高融化潜热使组织在冰泥注入后很长时间内保持冷却。冰泥温度影响组织冷却速度。在猪中,当将 30ml 的-3.5°C 冰泥注射与 15ml 的-4.8°C 冰泥注射(总冰量相同)进行比较时,后者导致组织冷却速度几乎快了一倍。NMR 显示在脂质结晶后扩散大大减少;在冰泥注射后,具有较高冷冻温度的饱和脂质更容易凝固。
总注入冰量决定了冷冻溶脂治疗的组织体积和冰泥注入后的冷却持续时间,而冰泥温度影响冷却速度。脂质饱和度随饮食和解剖位置而变化,也有重要影响。