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2. LASER THERAPY BEST AND GOOD PAPER AWARDS: THE RESULTS ARE IN!
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Generosity ,Incentive ,Operations research ,Laser therapy ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cash ,Law ,Biomedical Engineering ,Surgery ,Editorial board ,media_common - Abstract
Welcome, dear readers, to the first issue of Volume 24 of the journal. It is hard to believe that three months have passed since I wrote to you in the last issue of Volume 23 … time really does fly, and here we are at the end of March, 2015, already one-quarter of the way through the UN-designated International Year of Light and Light-Based Devices. As you are all aware, for the past few years the journal has been offering an annual set of awards together with cash prizes, one for the Best Paper, and two for Good Papers published in any one volume of the journal. Last year (Volume 23) was supposed to be the final year for this initiative as the journal had set aside only a certain amount of funds, but as I wrote in my previous Editorial, I believe that these awards are a powerful incentive for authors to contribute their experience and research to the journal and to you, so I am taking over the role of the award sponsor. Thus, from this year and the current volume, the awards will be known as the Ohshiro-Laser Therapy Awards. In any event, the results for the 2014 Laser Therapy awards have now been compiled from all the votes lodged by the Laser Therapy International Editorial Board Members who serve as the Award Adjudicators. In addition, since Volume 22, the younger authors contributing to the journal as first author have also enjoyed another set of awards thanks to the generosity of Professor Ming-Chien Kao with his Award for Young Researchers, and these results are also in. I am therefore pleased and honoured to present the results in resume in the table below: they are given in full elsewhere in the body of the journal. Sincere congratulations to the winners, and if you didn't win for Volume 23, now is your chance to get a paper in for Volume 24 (please see the announcement elsewhere in the journal for full details)! Winners of the Laser Therapy and Ming-Chien Kao Awards
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- 2015
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3. Laser Therapy Best and Good Paper Awards: The Results are in!
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Ohshiro T
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- 2015
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4. Spring into this new year with the 'laser therapy best paper awards, 2012'!
- Author
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Toshio Ohshiro
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Operations research ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Milestone ,Ancient history ,Editorial ,Laser therapy ,Editorial team ,Spring (hydrology) ,Medicine ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
As I write this, spring is definitely in the air, and the windy but decreasingly cold days of March will soon give way to the warmer days of April, at least in the Northern Hemisphere: for those of you ‘down south’, summer is gradually giving way to autumn. For us all, however, it's a season of transition. But wherever you are, a very warm welcome from the Laser Therapy editorial team to the first issue of the 21st volume of our journal, as we proudly enter our third decade! What better way to celebrate this milestone event than to be celebrated by Laser Therapy's one and only ‘Poet Laureate’, Professor Isaac Kaplan.
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- 2014
5. THE WINNERS OF THE BEST/GOOD PAPER AWARDS 2014
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- 2015
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6. Erratum: Mistake in the publication of a paper in Laser Therapy 23:4
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- 2015
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7. Spring into this new year with the "laser therapy best paper awards, 2012"!
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Ohshiro T
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- 2012
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8. THE WINNERS OF THE BEST/GOOD PAPER AWARDS 2013
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- 2014
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9. BEST/GOOD PAPER AWARDS
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- 2014
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10. Best Paper Awards 2014
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- 2014
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11. The Winners of the Best/Good Paper Awards 2012
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- 2013
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12. Best Paper Awards 2014
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- 2013
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13. The Best/Good Paper Awards 2012
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- 2013
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14. THE BEST/GOOD PAPER AWARDS 2012
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- 2012
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15. LASER THERAPY Best/Good Paper Awards 2013
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- 2012
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16. LASER THERAPY Best Paper Award 2011
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- 2011
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17. THE WINNERS OF THE BEST/GOOD PAPER AWARDS 2010
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- 2011
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18. Laser Therapy Best Paper Award 2010/2011
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- 2010
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19. REQUEST FOR SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
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Ohshiro, Toshio, primary
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- 2006
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20. REQUEST FOR SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Biomedical Engineering ,Surgery - Published
- 2006
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21. FREE PAPERS
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- 1990
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22. A PCR based study to evaluate the effectiveness of photodynamic therapy in extraction socket disinfection.
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Nerkar, Sakshi K., Hegde, Rashmi, Shaikh, Nida, and Langade, Neha
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- 2024
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23. Report on the 3rd International Scientific Meeting on Cosmetic Dermatology incorporated with the International Society for Laser Surgery and Medicine Congress 2023, Bali, Indonesia, June 16th-18th.
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Ana Elena Aviña, Nguyen Le Thanh Hang Agnes, and Cheng-Jen Chang
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- 2023
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24. Good news from China!
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Longo, Leonardo
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- 2024
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25. Photobiomodulation therapy for oral lesions: a bibliometric analysis.
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Wangsa, Clarissa Wiemputri, Gunardi, Indrayadi, Amtha, Rahmi, Djamil, Melanie Sadono, and Sari, Elizabeth Fitriana
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- 2024
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26. Light-Emitting-Diode photochemical effects in dentistry: an overview.
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Fornaini, Carlo, Wang, Huichao, Li, YuPu, and Rocca, Jean Paul
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- 2024
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27. Low-intensity laser-assisted antimicrobial photodynamic therapy and intravascular laser irradiation of blood in oncology: systematic review and a brief report.
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Pacheco, Juliano Abreu, Pretel, Hermes, Pinheiro, Sergio Luiz, Molena, Kelly Fernanda, Tholt, Beatriz, and Veiga, Eugenia Velludo
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- 2024
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28. Effect of Nd:YAG and 980nm Diode laser irradiation as a hypersensitivity treatment on shear bond strength of metal orthodontic brackets to enamel.
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Karimi, Mahsa, Sarmadi, Sarvin, Chiniforush, Nasim, and Behforouz, Aria
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- 2023
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29. Management interventions for amputation stump neuromas: evidence based review and cost-benefit analysis.
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Azzopard, Ernest A., Stewart, Philipa, Boyce, Dean Edward, Murison, Maxwell, Sadideen, Hazim, and Clementoni, Matteo Tretti
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- 2023
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30. Management interventions for amputation stump neuromas: evidence based review and cost-benefit.
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Azzopardi, Ernest A., Stewart, Philipa, Boyce, Dean Edward, Murison, Maxwell, Sadideen, Hazim, and Clementoni, Matteo Tretti
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- 2023
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31. Incidence and outcome of suction loss during corneal lenticule extraction with the femtosecond laser application CLEAR.
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Leccisotti, Antonio, Fields, Stefania V., De Bartolo, Giuseppe, and Crudale, Christian
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- 2023
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32. Effectiveness of Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) in the treatment of Lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET): an umbrella review
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Ioannis, Mamais, Konstantinos, Papadopoulos, Demetris, Lamnisos, and Demetrios, Stasinopoulos
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Original Articles - Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this umbrella review is to determine the effectiveness of LLLT in the treatment of LET and to provide recommendations based on this evidence. METHODS: A comprehensive and systematic review was undertaken using Medline, EBSCO and EMBASE. Systematic reviews or meta-analysis were included if they compared Laser with at least one of the following: (i) placebo, (ii) no treatment, (iii) another treatment, conservative (physical therapy intervention or medical) or operative of LET. Principal outcomes included the assessment of short and long-term effect on functional status, pain, grip strength (pain-free or maximum) and a global measure (overall improvement). RESULTS: Seven papers met the inclusion criteria for the umbrella review, Five papers were of moderate and two of low methodological quality. All reviews reported benefits associated with laser therapy Vs other intervention or placebo, however the significance of the identified benefits differed between studies and reviews. No review reported negative effects of laser therapy or harm to patients. All reviews noted significant variance between included studies with 2 reviews citing statistically significant heterogeneity. It is essential to consider this in the interpretation of these data. CONCLUSION: This umbrella review found poor results for the effectiveness of LLLT in the management of LET. Therefore, further research with well-designed RCTs is required to provide meaningful evidence on the effectiveness (absolute and relative) of LLLT for the management of LET.
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- 2020
33. Effectiveness of Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) in the treatment of Lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET): an umbrella review
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Konstantinos Papadopoulos, Demetris Lamnisos, Ioannis Mamais, and Demetrios Stasinopoulos
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Elbow Tendinopathy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,MEDLINE ,Placebo ,03 medical and health sciences ,Grip strength ,0302 clinical medicine ,Systematic review ,Intervention (counseling) ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Surgery ,Functional status ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Low level laser therapy - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this umbrella review is to determine the effectiveness of LLLT in the treatment of LET and to provide recommendations based on this evidence. Methods: A comprehensive and systematic review was undertaken using Medline, EBSCO and EMBASE. Systematic reviews or meta-analysis were included if they compared Laser with at least one of the following: (i) placebo, (ii) no treatment, (iii) another treatment, conservative (physical therapy intervention or medical) or operative of LET. Principal outcomes included the assessment of short and long-term effect on functional status, pain, grip strength (pain-free or maximum) and a global measure (overall improvement). Results: Seven papers met the inclusion criteria for the umbrella review, Five papers were of moderate and two of low methodological quality. All reviews reported benefits associated with laser therapy Vs other intervention or placebo, however the significance of the identified benefits differed between studies and reviews. No review reported negative effects of laser therapy or harm to patients. All reviews noted significant variance between included studies with 2 reviews citing statistically significant heterogeneity. It is essential to consider this in the interpretation of these data. Conclusion: This umbrella review found poor results for the effectiveness of LLLT in the management of LET. Therefore, further research with well-designed RCTs is required to provide meaningful evidence on the effectiveness (absolute and relative) of LLLT for the management of LET.
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- 2018
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34. Correct calibration procedure for the Q-switched ruby laser and checking the treatment irradiation pattern
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Naoyuki Ohshiro, Mituaki Kozuma, Toshio Ohshiro, Takafumi Ohshiro, Katsumi Sasaki, Yuichi Kageyama, and Kiyofumi Takenouchi
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Computer science ,Ruby laser ,Biomedical Engineering ,Original Articles ,Treatment results ,Laser ,Treatment efficacy ,law.invention ,Footprint ,Beam pattern ,Q switched ruby laser ,law ,Calibration ,Surgery ,Simulation - Abstract
Background and aims: There are many Q-switched lasers. The Q-switched ruby laser is the one most popularly used in dermatology, aesthetic surgery and plastic surgery, to remove pigmented lesions or tattoos. Correct and regular calibration of such a system is essential. However, some clinics fail to perform this with the excuse of having no measuring instrument (MI) in their offices or treatment rooms in some of their hospitals or clinics, or even the case of well-known medical universities in Japan. The present article explains the precise calibration procedure and beam pattern checking for the Q-switched ruby systems in the first author's clinic. Rationale: In the case of treatment with a medical laser, the calibration and the irradiated pattern (IP) check of the laser being used for treatment are the most important factors for treatment efficacy and safety. If these factors change, the treatment result could be different from that expected. Such kind of data are not acceptable as scientific information for a presentation or published paper. With such unreliable results and incorrect beam pattern, replicating such a study would be impossible Regular calibration check: In our clinic, we have 2 Q-switched ruby laser systems. On a daily basis, the beam patterns, both the optical axis of the beam and its treatment footprint, are checked on dedicated printed sheets and footprint paper, respectively, at the beginning of the day and after the last procedure. Every two weeks we calibrate our systems in-house using a precise MI. Every six months we calibrate the systems in-house with the MI, and then we send the systems back to the manufacturers for calibration. Once every year, we have our MI calibrated by an accredited facility in Japan. In this way, we are not only ensuring accurate and safe treatment for our patients, but we are also producing accurate system and treatment data which can be replicated by others, the basis of evidence-based medicine.
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- 2013
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35. The Season for Plums … and for Laser and Light-Based Device Meetings
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Riviera ,Editorial ,Laser therapy ,Operations research ,Computer science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Library science ,Alcohol content ,Surgery ,Banner ,Social program - Abstract
A warm (but wet) welcome, literally, from Tokyo, where we are “enjoying” our annual “tsuyu” or rainy season. The term actually means “plum rain” because it is associated with the seasonal ripening of the green plum known here as “ume”. While still green, they can be layered in a suitable container with rock sugar crystals and covered in clear liquor with an alcohol content of around 37%, then left for a minimum of 6 months, although in general the longer it is left, the tastier is the resulting liquor. This is called “Umeshu”, or plum wine, and is enjoyed straight, on the rocks, or as a long drink with ice and soda which makes it a really refreshing summertime drink. When the plums start to turn orange-yellow, they are ready to be dried and pickled to produce the mouth-puckering but refreshing “umeboshi”, pickled plums. However, more importantly for Laser Therapy, this is also the season for a number of important meetings of societies for laser- and light-based medicine, who are also using Laser Therapy as their official organ. By the time you read this, the European Association for Laser Aesthetic Surgery (ESLAS) will have held their annual meeting under the banner of the European Laser Association and in cooperation with the Dutch Laser Association, in beautiful Athens (June 25th – 27th). I hope as many of as possible will have supported this meeting which had a very strong LLLT component. Then at the beginning of July, on the 9th and 10th, there will be the 6th meeting of the International Phototherapy Association (IPTA), in Nice on the French Riviera. The program of abstracts of this meeting is printed elsewhere in the journal, from which you can see there is a large variety of subjects covered by some of the acclaimed international experts in the field. Take a look at www.ipta6congress.international - it is probably too late to submit an abstract, but never too late to book for the warm and sunny venue of Nice and enjoy a strong scientific and excellent social program under the care of Professors Jean-Paul Roca, aided and abetted by Professors Carlo Fornaini and Leonardo Longo. In August, The 21st Congress of the International Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery (ISLSM), will take place from the 20th to the 22nd of the month, in the Hotel Fortune Landmark, Indore, in the very heart of central India. The ambitious programme is developing nicely under the Congress President and ISLSM President-Elect, Dr Sharon Rau, and the Chairman of the Organizing Committee, Prof Krishna Rau. Please visit www.islsm2015.com. As part of the run-up to the ISLSM in India, I had planned to make this a ”Focus on India” issue. However, because of a conflict with the number of refereed and accepted papers, other papers already in line for publication, and the necessity to publish the abstracts from the 6th IPTA meeting, this issue was called “Focus on India, Part 1”. Volume 2:3 will be Focus on India, Part 2, when we will publish some more papers from our Indian colleagues. Although it is not a meeting with roots in the journal, another interesting meeting for Laser Therapy readers to think about putting in their calendars is the 5CC (Five Continents' Congress) meeting in Cannes, France, September 3rd to 6th. This meeting attracts more and more attendees with a larger faculty each year, with R Glen Calderhead on faculty this year to represent the interests of the journal, the WFSLMS, ISLSM and IPTA. Dr Michael Gold is the Congress President, and details can be found by visiting http://www.5-cc.com/cannes-2015/home/. The Call for Abstracts has gone out, and abstract submission details can be found on the website in addition to the tentative programme.
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- 2015
36. AWARDS GALORE ... THE RESULTS ARE IN!
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Operations research ,business.industry ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biomedical Engineering ,Media studies ,Yesterday ,Research findings ,Editorial ,Laser therapy ,Publishing ,Excellence ,Surgery ,business ,media_common ,Adjudication - Abstract
Welcome, dear readers, to the first issue of Volume 23 of Laser Therapy, and to the first issue of 2014, the Year of the Horse, which is now well and truly under way. “March,” they say, “comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb.” There will be many people worldwide who have suffered from the intense weather phenomena, like raging Australian forest fires, the North American plunging temperatures and blizzards and the widespread hurricane-strength storms and flooding in the UK, who will be wishing that the “lamb” part of the saying should come true as quickly as possible. Our thoughts go out to all those who have suffered from calamitous weather-related events in these first months of 2014. As I write, Japan is unseasonably cold for March, with snow storms here and there. However, Nature presses on, and the cherry blossoms will very soon explode in Kyushu, to the south of Japan, so we can look forward to warmer and sunnier weather It is hard to believe that this is the 23rd year in which the journal has appeared, and it seems almost yesterday when we were discussing the possibility of publishing the journal with John Wiley and Sons of Chichester, UK: that process actually started in 1987, and we have come a long way since then. Now the journal has reached new peaks of excellence, and has garnered international recognition by the leading indexing services. None of this could have happened without papers to publish, and that is still the case, dear readers, so please, send in your papers! As you read this we are already one-quarter of the way through 2014, which means that you only have 9 months left to get your paper in to us, and qualify for entry to our two awards for selected papers: the Laser Therapy Best/Good Papers Award and the newly founded Ming-Chien Kao Award for Young Researchers. All you have to do is get you clinical or research findings down on paper, and send them in! The results of the adjudication panels for papers published in 2013 have been scored and totaled, so without further ado, here they are!
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- 2014
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37. Focus on taiwan
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Focus (computing) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biomedical Engineering ,Take over ,Editorial ,Laser therapy ,Editorial team ,Zodiac ,Economic history ,Medicine ,Great Year ,Surgery ,Psychological resilience ,Hard copy ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Welcome to the final issue of Volume 20, one-fifth of a century of Laser Therapy! As this issue reaches you in hard copy form, the majority of readers will be in the middle of the holiday season, and either shivering or enjoying glorious sunshine, depending on your hemisphere. Wherever you are, on behalf of the entire Editorial team, may I wish you the happiest of holiday seasons and all the very best for the New Year, 2012, the Year of the Dragon in the Oriental 12-animal zodiac (although the Dragon doesn't officially take over from the Rabbit till January 23rd, Chinese New Year). This issue was set aside as the ‘Focus on Taiwan’ issue. There were originally 5 papers from Taiwan, but one non-light therapy paper was rejected and one carried over to 21:1, so this issue comprises 3 Taiwanese papers, two from Japan, and one each from Argentina and the UK. As I am sure you are all aware, the Year of the Rabbit was not a great year for Japan, what with the Great Earthquake and Tsunami in March from which we suffer continued fall-out and the not so occasional trembler. We must especially think, at this normally joyful time, of those who lost family and friends, their businesses and their homes, to which many have as yet been unable to return. Now, the spectre of radioactive contamination haunts us, with high levels of radioactive elements, especially cesium, in many different foodstuffs, including fish, dominating the daily news. The legacy for our younger Japanese children is not a cheery one, but with typical Japanese resilience, we will keep on fighting, with hope strong in our hearts for an eventual solution to all the problems which were thrust on us in March of this year.
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- 2013
38. LLLT AND PDT
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H. Friedmann and Rachel Lubart
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Hematoporphyrin ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Endogeny ,Photodynamic therapy ,Stimulation ,biology.organism_classification ,Letter to Editor ,HeLa ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,medicine ,Biophysics ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Optoelectronics ,Surgery ,Photosensitizer ,Irradiation ,business - Abstract
This Letter relates to the paper of Yuichi Miyamoto et al., “EFFECT OF 630-NM PULSED LASER IRRADIATION ON THE PROLIFERATION OF HeLa CELLS IN PHOTOFRIN®-MEDIATED PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY” published recently in Vol. 20 (2). The authors investigated changes in cell proliferation following PDT using 630nm laser irradiation which was clinically found to induce no remarkable cell injury. They found that the viability of irradiated HeLa cells was greater than that of non-irradiated cells, i.e. an LLLT effect. They derived the conclusion that in PDT when light doses become remarkably low (deep within the tissue), pronounced LLLT effects and no cytotoxic effects are obtained. We would like to draw the attention of the readers to an old paper of us1) where we found that the proliferation rate of fibroblasts enriched with small amounts of hematoporphyrin derivatives (HPD) was increased following low intensity HeNe laser irradiation. PDT and LLLT are two edges of the same sword. In PDT, exogenous photosensitizers are introduced into the cells and then irradiated with wavelengths of visible or near infra-red (NIR) light to produce high amounts of ROS that are lethal to the cells. In LLLT, light is absorbed by endogenous cellular photosensitizers such as cytochromes, flavins, porphyrins and NADH.2) Since the amount of endogenous cellular photosensitizers is relatively small, low concentrations of ROS are generated. It is well established that ROS in minute concentrations stimulate cellular functions like proliferation.3) The fact that exogenous porphyrins combined with very low energy visible light enhance proliferation must be taken into account when using PDT. Cancerous cells enriched with small amounts of photosensitizers (like those at the border of a malignant tumor) may proliferate better after irradiation. For the same reason, LLLT should be avoided in the presence of cancerous cells.4) LLLT and PDT can be viewed as different zones of the well-known Arndt-Schultz (A-S) curve, (see e.g. Fig. 10 in the review of T. Ohshiro5). Zone 1, ascending part of the A-S curve: weak to moderate light doses and endogenous photosensitizers:, or very weak light doses adding exogenous photosensitizers, or moderate light doses adding minute amounts of exogenous photosensitizers lead to stimulation as in LLLT. Zone 2, the A-S curve descends back to the baseline: in this Zone, strong light doses and endogenous photosensitizers or moderate light doses adding small amounts of exogenous photosensitizers lead to neutralizing the stimulation obtained in Zone 1. Zone 3, the A-S curve descends below the baseline: in Zone 3, a further increase of the combined light and exogenous photosensitizer stimuli dosage leads to PDT.
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- 2011
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39. Effective management of focal reactive gingival overgrowths by diode laser: A review and report of two cases
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Pratiksha Kumar, Madhu Singh Ratre, Pratik A. Chaudhari, and Shaleen Khetarpal
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Electrosurgery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Case Report ,Cryosurgery ,law.invention ,Lesion ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,medicine ,Oral mucosa ,business.industry ,Peripheral ossifying fibroma ,Soft tissue ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Laser ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Peripheral giant-cell granuloma ,Surgery ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background Focal reactive gingival overgrowths (FRGO) are a common observation in a clinical dental practice that may occur in response to external and internal chronic stimuli in form of fibrous connective tissue lesions in the oral mucosa. Gingiva is the most commonly involved site of oral reactive lesions. For the confirmed diagnosis of FRGO not only clinical, but the histopathological presentation of the lesion plays a vital role. Various surgical treatment modalities like a scalpel, cryosurgery, electrosurgery, and lasers have been applied in the management of FRGO. The laser is new treatment modality being employed for treatment of FRGO. Case report The purpose of this paper is to attempt short review on FRGO with the management of FRGO using diode laser. Here, we present effective management of peripheral giant cell granuloma and peripheral ossifying fibroma using diode laser. The follow-up of 01year showed no recurrence in both the cases. Conclusions Diode soft tissue laser has added advantages like a bloodless surgical field, reduced bacteremia, minimal intra and postoperative discomfort over conventional modalities. Thus it is highly effective in the surgical management of FRGO.
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- 2019
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40. Picosecond Laser-Induced Photothermal Skin Damage Evaluation by Computational Clinical Trial
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Nobuhisa Ito, Kunio Awazu, Takahiro Nishimura, Yu Shimojo, and Hisanao Hazama
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Materials science ,Picosecond laser ,Biomedical Engineering ,030206 dentistry ,Original Articles ,Photothermal therapy ,Laser ,law.invention ,Modeling and simulation ,Clinical trial ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Laser medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Evaluation methods ,Surgery ,Biomedical engineering ,Skin damage - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Computational clinical trial (CCT) in the field of laser medicine promotes clinical application of novel laser devices, because this trial carried out based on numerical modeling of laser-tissue interactions and simulation of a series of treatment process. To confirm the feasibility of the computational clinical trial of skin treatment with a novel picosecond laser, this paper presents an evaluation method of the safety. STUDY DESIGN/MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this method, the light propagation and thermal diffusion process after ultrashort light pulse irradiation to a numerical skin model is calculated and the safety based on the photothermal damage is evaluated by computational modeling and simulation. As an example, the safety of a novel picosecond laser device was examined by comparing with several laser devices approved for clinical use. RESULTS: The ratio of the maximum thermal damage induced by picosecond laser irradiation was 1.2 × 10(−2) % at the epidermis, while that caused by approved laser irradiation was 99 % at the capillary vessels. The numerical simulation demonstrated that less thermal damage was observed compared with the approved devices. The results show the safety simulated by photothermal damage calculation was consistent with the reported clinical trials. CONCLUSIONS: This computational clinical trial shows the feasibility of applying computational clinical trials for the safety evaluation of novel medical laser devices. In contrast to preclinical and clinical tests, the proposed computational method offers regulatory science for appropriately and quickly predicting and evaluating the safety of a novel laser device.
- Published
- 2019
41. CO2 Laser-Mediated Apically Positioned Flap in Areas Lacking Keratinized Gingiva
- Author
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Samir Nammour, Carlos Khoury, Toni Zeinoun, and Zeina Majzoub
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Periosteum ,Keratinized gingiva ,Co2 laser ,Mucogingival junction ,Augmentation procedure ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Dentistry ,Soft tissue ,030206 dentistry ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,Coronal plane ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Buccal frenum - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Autogenous gingival grafts are considered the "gold standard" for gingival augmentation, however they require a second surgical site for graft harvesting. Apically positioned flaps (APFs) represent an alternative method in soft tissue augmentation procedures. Limited information is available relative to the effectiveness of laser-mediated APF in augmenting keratinized gingiva (KG). The aim of this paper is to evaluate soft tissues changes following APF using CO2 laser in mandibular incisors with minimal KG and high labial frenum attachment. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 20 patients with minimal amount of KG (< 2 mm) on the labial aspect of one mandibular incisor and high buccal frenum insertion were selected for treatment. Only 19 completed the last follow-up visit. An APF consisting of a single superficial horizontal incision just coronal to the mucogingival junction using CO2 laser, elevation of a split-thickness flap, and suturing of the flap to the periosteum in an apical position was performed. The apico-coronal height of KG was measured at baseline, and at 3, 6 and 12 months postoperatively. RESULTS Uneventful healing was observed in all patients and an increase in KG of 2-3 mm was obtained. Most patients rated the procedure and the postoperative course as non painful. CONCLUSIONS CO2 laser-assisted APF procedure is a minimally invasive treatment modality associated with reduced risk of bleeding and predictable increase in the height of KG.
- Published
- 2017
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42. Surface treatment comparison by application of diamond bur and Er,Cr:YSGG at different powers: morphological and mechanical evaluation
- Author
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Nasim Chiniforush, Esmael Yassini, Mansoreh Mirzaie, Ardavan Etemadi, and Atefeh Tavakoli
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Materials science ,Composite number ,Biomedical Engineering ,Treatment comparison ,Dentistry ,engineering.material ,law.invention ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Silicon carbide ,Composite material ,Universal testing machine ,business.industry ,Bond strength ,Diamond ,Original Articles ,030206 dentistry ,Laser ,chemistry ,engineering ,Tukey's range test ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Purpose: This study evaluated the micro-tensile bond strength of new and previous composite resin restorations after surface treatment with diamond bur and Er,Cr:YSGG laser at different power settings (2,3 and 4 W). Materials and methods: Micro-hybride composite resin was inserted in metallic mold 5 ×5 ×15 mm and cured for 40 sec according to manufacturer's instruction.12 blocks were made. The bonded surfaces of the 12 blocks so obtained were subsequently ground using Silicon Carbide papers 1200 grit, for 15 seconds under running water. Then the samples randomly were divided into 4 groups: (G1) Bur-treated, (G2) Er,Cr:YSGG laser with power of 2 W and energy of 100 mJ, (G3) Er,Cr:YSGG laser with power of 3 W and energy of 150 mJ, (G4) Er,Cr:YSGG laser with power of 4 W and energy of 200 mJ. One sample of each group was analyzed by SEM while, after cutting the blocks to 1 mm2 of area samples, the others samples were mechanically tested by Universal testing machine with the speed of 0.5 mm per minute till fracture point. Data were analysed using One-Way ANOVA and Tukey Test. Results: T-test showed no significantly differences between G2 and G4(P=0.064) while G3 demonstrated significant differences than G2 (P=0.001) and G4(P=0.000) and also between samples treated with bur (G1) and G2 (P=0.242) ,G3 (P=0.000) ,G4 (P=0.829); G1 didn't significantly differ to G2 and G4(P>0.05), while G1 and G3(P
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- 2016
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43. Application to skin physiology using optical coherence tomography
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Masato Ohmi
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010302 applied physics ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Resting state fMRI ,Heartbeat ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Lumen (anatomy) ,Blood flow ,Anatomy ,Original Articles ,01 natural sciences ,Peripheral ,010309 optics ,SWEAT ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sweat gland ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Background and aims: The sweat glands and peripheral vessels beneath the skin surface act as minute organs governed by the skin sympathetic nerves and have important physiological functions for body temperature control and nutrition support along with maintenance of a peripheral organization. Dynamics of the mental sweating of sweat glands and the peripheral vessels reflect the activity of a sympathetic nerve. The purpose of this paper is to study the dynamic observation and analysis of sweat glands and a peripheral vessels by optical coherence tomography (OCT). Materials and Methods: In the dynamic analysis of mental sweating of sweat glands, after confirmation of the resting state of the volunteer, mental stress was applied in the form of unpleasant sound for 0.5 sec; piled-up en-face OCT images of sweat glands were then obtained time-sequentially, with the frame-spacing of 3.3 sec. A swept-source (SS) OCT was used for in vivo en-face OCT of a group of sweat glands on the subject's fingertip. Furthermore, we conducted in vivo dynamic analysis in response to external mental stress of a peripheral vessel in the second joint of the subject's third finger using 1.3-µm SS OCT. Results: We analyzed time variation in the amount of excess sweat produced by a group of sweat glands and found a large difference in the amount of sweat stored by each sweat gland in the spiral lumen. Mental stress was also shown to cause the small artery of the finger to contract, reducing blood flow. In particular, the thickness of the tunica media of the small artery changed abruptly in response to the sound stress, increasing and then decreasing so that the artery contracted and expanded, respectively. Conclusions: Dynamic analysis of mental sweating in the eccrine sweat glands and changes in peripheral vessels was performed using time-sequential OCT imaging. For mental sweating, time variation in the amount of excess sweat produced could be simultaneously evaluated for a few tens of eccrine sweat glands. Furthermore, we performed the dynamic analysis of a peripheral vessel in a human finger in response to external mental stress and found that the small artery contracted and expanded in response to sound stress while continuing to pulse in synchronization with the heartbeat. These studies have the potential for establishing new knowledge about skin physiology.
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- 2017
44. Laser ion acceleration toward future ion beam cancer therapy - Numerical simulation study
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T. Nagashima, Shigeo Kawata, M. Takano, Yanjun Gu, Y. Y. Ma, Wei-Min Wang, Qing Kong, T. Izumiyama, Ping Xiao Wang, and Daisuke Barada
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Materials science ,Ion beam ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Original Articles ,Laser ,Ion gun ,Focused ion beam ,law.invention ,Ion ,Ion beam deposition ,Ion implantation ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Reflectron ,law ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Surgery ,Atomic physics ,business - Abstract
Background: Ion beam has been used in cancer treatment, and has a unique preferable feature to deposit its main energy inside a human body so that cancer cell could be killed by the ion beam. However, conventional ion accelerator tends to be huge in its size and its cost. In this paper a future intense-laser ion accelerator is proposed to make the ion accelerator compact. Subjects and methods: An intense femtosecond pulsed laser was employed to accelerate ions. The issues in the laser ion accelerator include the energy efficiency from the laser to the ions, the ion beam collimation, the ion energy spectrum control, the ion beam bunching and the ion particle energy control. In the study particle computer simulations were performed to solve the issues, and each component was designed to control the ion beam quality. Results: When an intense laser illuminates a target, electrons in the target are accelerated and leave from the target; temporarily a strong electric field is formed between the high-energy electrons and the target ions, and the target ions are accelerated. The energy efficiency from the laser to ions was improved by using a solid target with a fine sub-wavelength structure or by a near-critical density gas plasma. The ion beam collimation was realized by holes behind the solid target. The control of the ion energy spectrum and the ion particle energy, and the ion beam bunching were successfully realized by a multi-stage laser-target interaction. Conclusions: The present study proposed a novel concept for a future compact laser ion accelerator, based on each component study required to control the ion beam quality and parameters.
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- 2013
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45. Laser doppler myography (LDMi): A novel non-contact measurement method for the muscle activity
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Ilaria Ercoli, Lorenzo Scalise, Paolo Marchionni, Enrico Primo Tomasini, and Sara Casaccia
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Materials science ,Flexor Carpi Ulnaris ,Muscle fatigue ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Electrical impedance myography ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Biomedical Engineering ,Original Articles ,Electromyography ,Laser Doppler velocimetry ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,education ,Low level laser therapy ,Muscle contraction ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Background and aims: Electromyography (EMG) is considered the gold-standard for the evaluation of muscle activity. Transversal and dimensional changes of the muscle, during muscle activity, generate vibrational phenomena which can be measured by Laser Doppler Vibrometry (LDVi). There is a relationship between muscle contraction and vibrational activity, therefore, some information on fundamental muscle parameters can be assessed without contact with LDVi. In this paper, we explore the possibility to relate the EMG signal causing the muscle contraction and the vibrational activity also measureable on the muscle. A novel non-contact measurement method — Laser Doppler myography (LDMi) - aiming to measure the vibrational behavior of muscle during contraction, is presented herein. Correlations with some parameters normally measured with EMG are reported. Materials and methods: The proposed method has been compared with standard superficial EMG (sEMG). Signals produced with sEMG and laser Doppler myography have been simultaneously acquired and processed to test correlations on a population of 20 healthy volunteers. Tests have been carried out on the flexor carpi ulnaris and the tibialis anterior muscles (left and right). Results: Results show that it is possible to measure: The timing of muscle activation (max differences: 440 ms), the amplitude of the signals acquired during activation respect to the signals during rest (S/N), the correlation between the S/N of the sEMG and LDMi signals at different levels of force (P> 0.89), and to assess muscle fatigue. Conclusions: LDMi is a valid measurement technique for the assessment of muscle activity and fatigue. It is a non-contact method and this characteristic could suggest its use together with low level laser therapy pre-, intra- and post-LLLT sessions to evaluate the efficacy and effects of the treatments without the need for invasive electrodes.
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- 2013
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46. CO
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Toni, Zeinoun, Zeina, Majzoub, Carlos, Khoury, and Samir, Nammour
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Original Articles - Abstract
Autogenous gingival grafts are considered the "gold standard" for gingival augmentation, however they require a second surgical site for graft harvesting. Apically positioned flaps (APFs) represent an alternative method in soft tissue augmentation procedures. Limited information is available relative to the effectiveness of laser-mediated APF in augmenting keratinized gingiva (KG). The aim of this paper is to evaluate soft tissues changes following APF using COA total of 20 patients with minimal amount of KG (2 mm) on the labial aspect of one mandibular incisor and high buccal frenum insertion were selected for treatment. Only 19 completed the last follow-up visit. An APF consisting of a single superficial horizontal incision just coronal to the mucogingival junction using COUneventful healing was observed in all patients and an increase in KG of 2-3 mm was obtained. Most patients rated the procedure and the postoperative course as non painful.CO
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- 2016
47. APPLICATION OF LOW-LEVEL LASER THERAPY TO ORTHOPEDIC DISEASES AND EVALUATION OF ITS OPTICAL CHARACTERISTICS
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Toshio Ohshiro, Kengo Yamamoto, and Yoshimi Asagai
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Massage ,Ossification ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Osteoporosis ,Biomedical Engineering ,Osteoarthritis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Spastic cerebral palsy ,Orthopedic surgery ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Range of motion ,business ,Low level laser therapy - Abstract
This paper reports the findings obtained in our recent clinical study of the characteristics of low-level laser therapy (LLLT) and discusses the possibility of applying these findings to the treatment of previously unreported orthopedic diseases.Histological study of muscles: Following long-term (3-week or longer) irradiation, there was an increase in nerve activity, suggesting the possibility that irradiation have the potential to alter the distribution of the myofiber types.Application to a patient with osteoarthritis of the hip: The narrowing of the joint space and the range of motion of hip joint alleviated or improved and the pain lessened markedly.Application to patients with congenital clubfoot: The application of LLLT and corrective massage before the correction of deformities with a cast facilitated the correction, enabling further improvement in congenital clubfoot.The possibility of the application of LLLT in patients with osteoporosis: LLLT tended to stimulate ossification and suppress bone resorption temporarily, suggesting the feasibility of applying LLLT as a means of treating osteoporosis.The possibility of the use of LLLT applied to the neck for the improving the cerebral blood flow was evaluated in patients with spastic cerebral palsy, using single photon emission computed tomography.Better knowledge of the characteristics of light may expand the scope of application of phototherapy for other diseases.
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- 2010
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48. LATE RADIATION LESIONS OF URINARY BLADDER AND RECTUM IN PATIENTS WITH PROSTATE CANCER AFTER EXTERNAL RADIATION THERAPY AND PHOTOTHERAPY WITH LOW POWER NEAR INFRARED LASER
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L.A. Volodina, A.A. Zimin, V.A. Ovsyannikov, G. M. Zharinov, Kira A. Samoilova, and N.Yu. Neklasova
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Urinary bladder ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Urology ,Rectum ,Radiation ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radiation damage ,Medicine ,Hormonal therapy ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
The goal of this paper is to study the effect of phototherapy with near infrared laser on incidence of late radiation lesions of urinary bladder and rectum in patients with prostate cancer after external radiation therapy. The study was carried out at Department of New Technologies of Radiation Therapy. 559 patients with prostate cancer were treated with radiotherapy and hormonal therapy from January 2000 to June 2007. In 308 patients a “Lazernoe Solnyshko” laser apparatus was used (NIIEFA, λ = 890 nm, 45 mW, 10.8 J, duration of pulses 150 ns, frequency of pulses 3000 Hz, 16 radiating elements). The control group included 251 patients. Action of light was performed on the skin areas submitted to radiation therapy beginning from its 12th session during 4 minutes. In the control group the radiation damage of urinary bladder and rectum appeared in 7.6% and 10.7% of patients, while in the main group - in 1.95% and 2.92%, respectively (p < 0.01). Thus, the course of phototherapy with the near infrared low power laser at performance of radiotherapy decreases incidence of radiation damages of urinary bladder and rectum in patients with prostate cancer.
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- 2010
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49. MULTIFUNCTIONAL PHOTOACOUSTIC DIAGNOSIS OF BURN INJURIES
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Shunichi Sato, Minoru Obara, Kazuya Aizawa, and Daizoh Saitoh
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Burn injury ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Materials science ,Wound status ,Biomedical Engineering ,Acoustic sensor ,Hemodynamics ,Photoacoustic imaging in biomedicine ,Healthy tissue ,Human skin ,medicine ,Surgery ,Severe burn ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
For appropriate treatment of severe burn injuries, noninvasive, real-time diagnosis of the wound status, e.g., injury depth, is required; however, modalities for quantitative evaluation are limited. In this paper, a new method for multifunctional diagnosis of burns based on photoacoustic measurement is described. When a burn wound is irradiated with a short light pulse that is selectively absorbed by blood, the light can efficiently propagate though the injured tissue layer due to occlusion of blood vessels and the light is absorbed by blood in the healthy tissue layer under the wound, emitting a photoacoustic (PA) wave through a thermoelastic process. The PA wave can be detected with an acoustic sensor on the wound and its propagation time provides information on the depth of injury. In addition, PA measurement at dual wavelengths, oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin absorption dominant wavelengths, can provide information on local hemodynamics, which is also important for wound management. The validity of these techniques was demonstrated by experiments using rat burn models. Furthermore, applicability of this measurement to thick burned skins was examined by experiments using a thick burn mimicking model. The results suggest that the present PA diagnosis technique can be applied to human skin burns.
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- 2008
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50. Laser Therapy TWO DECADES ON: THE PHOENIX FLOURISHES
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Toshio Ohshiro
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Impact factor ,biology ,Operations research ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Library science ,biology.organism_classification ,Task (project management) ,Editorial ,Page count ,Laser therapy ,Editorial team ,Publishing ,Surgery ,business ,Phoenix ,Quarter (Canadian coin) - Abstract
As we approach the end of the third quarter of 2014, I look back over the last 2 decades and I am amazed, but proud and highly and gratified, at what Laser Therapy has accomplished in these 20 years. Of course, up till the first couple of years of the New Millennium we had a tremendous record, first under the steady hand of John Wiley and Sons of Chichester, UK, and then from Volume 6 with LT Publishers of Rishworth, Yorkshire as the publishing company and The University of Hokkaido Press as the printers. Then we had a small hiatus when the journal appeared to have disappeared, as it were. However, in 2004 I decided that it was time for the journal to ride again under its original masthead, and we put together the Laser Therapy Pilot Issue 2 which was sent out in 2004 as a sign that life was returning, and the Phoenix arose from its own ashes. During this past decade we have seen prompt and on-time quarterly publication of the journal from 14:1 in March 2005 all the way through till this issue. We have gone from a page count of 48 to 76 and occasionally 80 pages per issue. We became associated with the Japan Scientific and Technology Information Enumerator-Electronic (J-STAGE), and now every single issue of the journal from the first Pilot Issue in 1988 has been stored by J-STAGE in a digital format, and on-line searching is possible by author name or by keyword with free full-text PDF results available for every article older than 6 months under the free access credo (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/islsm). The journal contents have achieved scientific recognition and are now indexed by both EmBase in Europe and PubMed Central in the USA. We are in communication with the Thomson-Reuter Web of Science, which will be the final step in the long task of getting an impact factor established for Laser Therapy. In these 20 years, we have never missed our deadline for a single issue, so I'd like sincerely and humbly to thank you, our dear and faithful readers, contributors and subscribers, because without your papers to publish the journal, and subscriptions to the journal to provide the income to keep Laser Therapy going, we would not have been able to accomplish what we have. I'd also like to thank the hard-working Editorial Team here at JMLL, whose hard work and dedication have helped keep the journal to its deadlines.
- Published
- 2014
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