Joshua Zev Glahn, Michael Wang-Evers, Abigail R Carlson, Haley Marks, Daniel Karasik, Felix Hilge, Jeremy Goverman, Dieter Manstein
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Ablative fractional CO2 laser (10,600 nm) treatment creates an array of microscopic treatment zones composed of an ablation zone (AZ) surrounded by a denatured coagulation zone (CZ). The CZ is believed to play a functional role in skin tightening, posttreatment inflammation, and laser-assisted drug delivery. This study investigates the viability of enzymatic post-processing to remove the CZ without affecting the surrounding tissue.
Methods: Ex vivo skin samples were treated with either control, papain, urea, or papain-urea solutions before being covered with occlusive dressing and incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Tissue viability as well as AZ and CZ geometries were assessed histologically.
Results: Treatment with all three experimental solutions resulted in a decrease in CZ. The largest average reduction in CZ area was observed in the papain-urea group (44%, p < 0.001), followed by the papain (14%, p < 0.001) and urea (11%, p < 0.001) only groups. Only the papain-urea group showed a significant increase in AZ (14%) and changes in lesion geometry.
Conclusion: This exploratory study of enzymatic post-processing with papain-urea highlighted the potential of selectively removing the CZ after treatment with ablative fractional laser therapy. If results can be translated to in vivo studies, these findings could expand the use of high-fluence CO2 laser therapy with functional implications for lowering posttreatment recovery time, providing clinicians more control over skin tightening, and enabling a broader range of laser-assisted drug delivery.
期刊介绍:
Lasers in Surgery and Medicine publishes the highest quality research and clinical manuscripts in areas relating to the use of lasers in medicine and biology. The journal publishes basic and clinical studies on the therapeutic and diagnostic use of lasers in all the surgical and medical specialties. Contributions regarding clinical trials, new therapeutic techniques or instrumentation, laser biophysics and bioengineering, photobiology and photochemistry, outcomes research, cost-effectiveness, and other aspects of biomedicine are welcome. Using a process of rigorous yet rapid review of submitted manuscripts, findings of high scientific and medical interest are published with a minimum delay.