The pulsed dye laser (wavelength 504 nm, pulse duration 1 ps) is widely used for fragmenting urinary and biliary calculi. In this study, the performance of this laser was compared with pulsed dye lasers producing pulse durations of 8 and 20 ps. Fragmentation thresholds and fragmentation rates were m
Effect of laser pulse repetition rate and pulse duration on mast cell number and degranulation
β Scribed by El Sayed, Salah O.; Dyson, Mary
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 413 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0196-8092
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Background and Objective: Mast cell activation by low-level laser therapy (LLLT), leading to degranulation and the release of mediators, may be one of the mechanisms by which LLLT can accelerate tissue repair in mammals. The objective of this work, part of an investigation to determine the optimum parameters for increasing mast cell number and degranulation in injured skin, was to determine the effect of different pulsing frequencies of ULT. Study DesignfMaterials and Methods: Partial-thickness wounds in anaesthetized adult male Wistar rats were irradiated immediately after injury with monochromatic coherent light (wavelength 820 nm) pulsed at either 2.5, 20, 292, or 20,000 Hz at an average power densit of 800 mW/cm2 for 27 seconds; the energy density was 21.6 Jkm . The effects on mast cell number and degranulation were assessed 2 hours post-treatment by counting the numbers of intact and degranulated mast cells in Carnoyfixed, toluidine blue-stained, sections of irradiated and sham-irradiated wounds. Results: The total number of mast cells was increased significantly (Z-YO.05) by all the frequencies when compared to the sham-irradiated group, but there was no significant difference between frequencies (P>0.05). However, although the number of degranulated mast cells was higher in all laser-treated wounds, in comparison with the sham-irradiated group, only the 20 Hz (pulse duration 45 ms) and 292 Hz (pulse duration 3 ms) frequencies were significantly effective (P<0.05).
C o ~l u s i o n :
Increase in mast cell number is not pulsing frequency dependent, whereas degranulation is. z
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