Background:The pulsed dye laser is the treatment of choice for children with port-wine stains (PWSs). Evaluation of treatment outcome and adverse effects is traditionally based on subjective clinical scoring systems. We intend to objectify treatment results and adverse reactions after 1 treatment with the pulsed dye laser.Design: A before-and-after trial using skin reflectance to detect changes in skin redness and pigmentation, ultrasonography to evaluate changes in echostructure and skin thickness, and 3-dimensional surface contour analysis to detect changes in surface texture.Patients: Twelve children with PWSs.Setting: A university dermatological department.
Results:The skin reflectance-determined change in skin redness correlated with the clinical response (r=0.46, PϽ.002). The percentage of reflectance-determined lightening was equal for pink, red, and dark red PWSs (median, 42.9%). Skin pigmentation increased after laser treat-ment (PϽ.007). Ultrasonography revealed lower dermal echogenicity of preoperative PWSs than of postoperative PWSs (PϽ.007) and healthy skin (PϽ.001). An increase in echogenicity reflected a decrease in the dermal water (blood) content. Variations were found in the dermal localization of the PWS. Skin thickness was significantly higher in the PWS before treatment than after (PϽ.001). The preoperative lesional thickness correlated inversely with the ultrasound-assessed treatment response (r=0.35, PϽ.04). The surface contour parameters decreased significantly after laser treatment, indicating a flattening of the skin surface. The contour changes correlated positively with treatment response. By clinical evaluation, no hypopigmentation or texture changes were detected.
Conclusion:The evaluation of treatment outcome and adverse effects is refined by the use of skin reflectance, ultrasonographic, and surface contour analysis.
The pulsed dye laser is the treatment of choice for port-wine stains. In this study we evaluate the importance of preoperative skin pigmentation and skin redness for the development of side effects from one treatment with the pulsed dye laser. A risk assessment is performed and skin reflectance measurement objectifies postoperative pigmentary changes. Fourteen human volunteers (skin types I to V) were laser-treated on the inside of the proximal brachium. Photographic documentation was used for blinded, clinical evaluation of side effects 3 and 6 months postoperatively. Skin was artificially reddened using topical application of 10% nicotinic acid cream. The development of pigmentary alterations and texture changes depended on the preoperative pigmentation and redness degrees. The risk of inducing clinically visible pigmentary alterations and texture changes increased with higher preoperative skin pigmentation and redness degrees, and with the application of increasing laser doses. Pigmentary alterations were induced at a lower fluence level than texture changes. The risk of side effects was higher 3 months postoperatively than 6 months postoperatively, substantiating a gradual disappearance of side effects. Skin reflectance measurements documented postoperative hyperpigmentation that faded partially from 3 to 6 months postoperatively. This is the first human experimental model for port-wine stains which provides quantitative data on the relationship between preoperative skin colours and postoperative clinically disturbing side effects.
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