## Background and Objective: The pulsed dye laser was developed based on the concept of selective photothermolysis. By using a wavelength of light well absorbed by the target and pulse duration short enough to spatially confine thermal injury, specific vascular injury could be produced. Study Desig
New approaches to the laser treatment of vascular lesions
β Scribed by Jeffrey S Dover
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 77 KB
- Volume
- 41
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-8380
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
SUMMARY
The pulsed dye laser (PDL) was developed based on the concept of selective photothermolysis. Using a wavelength of light well absorbed by the target and a pulse duration short enough to spatially confine thermal injury, specific vascular injury could be produced. While the PDL revolutionized the treatment of portβwine stains (PWS) and a variety of other vascular lesions, the mathematical model predicted that the ideal thermal relaxation time for the vessels in PWS is actually 1β10 msec, not 450 ΞΌsec. These original theoretical calculations have been proved correct recently in a study using both an animalβvessel model and in human PWS. Longer wavelengths of light within the visible spectrum penetrate deeper into the skin and are more suitable for deeper vessels; while longer pulse duration is required for larger calibre vessels. A variety of lasers have been developed recently for the treatment of vascular lesions that incorporate these concepts into their design, including PDL at 1.5 msec, a filtered flashβlamp pulsed light source with pulse durations of 1β20 msec, several 532 nm pulsed lasers with pulse durations of 1 to as high as 100 msec, long pulsed alexandrite lasers at 755 nm with pulse durations up to 20 msec, pulsed diode lasers in the 800β900 nm range, and long pulsed 1064 Nd:YAG sources. Preliminary results are encouraging.
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