The optimal treatment of port-wine stains is laser-induced selective photothermolysis. Lesion color and location and the age of the patient are reported to influence the therapeutic outcome. This study was initiated to analyze the outcome not only by the clinical response of lightening, but also in terms of photothermally induced necrosis to the vessel wall. Punch biopsy specimens were taken from 51 patients before treatment. Post-treatment biopsies were taken after exposure to a pulsed dye laser (585-nm wavelength, 0.45-ms pulse length) with an irradiant fluence of 6.5 J/cm2. Vessel diameter, depth, and wall thickness were measured in all histologic slides. The viability of the vessel walls was evaluated using an enzyme histochemical method. Port-wine stains with good blanching had significantly more superficially located vessels than the moderate and poor responders (p < 0.000). The moderate and good responding lesions consisted of moderate-sized vessels with diameters of 38 +/- 17 micrometers and 38 +/- 19 micrometers (mean +/- SD), respectively. The lesions showing poor blanching had significantly smaller vessels, with a diameter of 19 +/- 6.5 micrometers < 0.000). Analyses of the post-treatment specimens showed that coagulated vessels were superficially located and of moderate size, whereas the viable vessels were small with a median diameter of 14 micrometers. The probability of coagulation correlated with the thickness of the vessel wall. These data indicate that the therapeutic outcome of port-wine stains can be improved by using the lesional vessel parameters to select the optimal laser wavelength, pulse duration, and dose.
Thirty patients were treated with a flashlamp-pumped pulsed dye laser, with 0.45 ms pulse width and 585 nm wavelength. Punch biopsies were taken prior to treatment, and the biopsies were examined morphometrically. Three different test sites were exposed to laser light of fluence 5.25, 6.50 and 7.75 J/cm2. The degree of blanching was examined 6-8 weeks after treatment, and each site was retreated four times. Six patients (20%) achieved poor blanching, eight patients (27%) obtained moderate lightening and 16 patients (53%) showed good response. The vessels of the good responders were located significantly more superficially than the vessels of the moderate and poor responders (P < 0.05). The poor responders had significantly smaller vessels than the moderate and good responders (P < 0.01). The moderate responders had deeper, but larger vessels, than the poor responders. Hence, an increasing vessel diameter reduces the negative outcome of increasing vessel depth. The vessel diameter was correlated to the colour (P < 0.01), e.g. the mean vessel diameter was increasing from 16.5 microns in pink lesions to 51.2 microns in purple lesions. The vessel depth was partly reflected in the lesional colour, as the pink and purple lesions had significantly deeper vessels than the red ones (P = 0.02). These results indicate that pink lesions predict poor blanching due to deeply located small vessels, while red lesions predict a good therapeutic result because of more superficially located vessels.
No statistically significant differences in hair removal efficacy were observed. These results agree with mathematical modeling, which also offers a method to estimate hair removal efficacy and adverse effects for a range of hair characteristics and laser parameters.
We investigated the occurrence of pigmentary changes after flash lamp pumped dye laser treatment in 125 Norwegian patients. Post-treatment hyperpigmentation occurred with equal frequency during summer and winter (23%), and the facial regions did not exhibit higher occurrence than lesions located elsewhere. The patients that achieved hyperpigmented skin were not exposed to any higher fluence than those without this complication. On the contrary, we found that during the summer period from April to September the patients with post-treatment hyperpigmentation had been exposed to a significantly lower dose than those without pigmentary changes. These results indicate that the epidermal melanin content is not the only criterion for obtaining post-treatment hyperpigmentation. There might also be a constitutional disposition. In predisposed individuals the threshold dose for hyperpigmentation might be reduced in summer when the skin is more pigmented.
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