6 results on '"pdl"'
Search Results
2. Combination laser treatment for immediate post-surgical scars: a retrospective analysis of 33 immature scars.
- Author
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Lee, Yongsoo and Kim, Wooram
- Subjects
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SCARS , *MEDICAL lasers , *SURGICAL complications , *MEDICAL photography , *MEDICAL records , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *THERAPEUTICS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COMBINED modality therapy , *FACE , *LASERS , *SKIN , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RESEARCH bias - Abstract
The application of laser treatments beginning on the day of stitch removal has been demonstrated to improve scar quality. However, there are few guidelines for the treatment of immature scars (ISs), which are defined as "scars whose features are not yet expressed." The purpose of this study was to extract information about early combination laser treatment (CLT) beyond what is currently known by analyzing 33 pairs of pre-treatment and post-treatment photographs of ISs. Two hundred fifty medical records of patients with scars were reviewed, and 33 scars were included in the study. The included scars were treated with vascular lasers (585 or 532 nm) followed by 1550-nm fractional lasers from May 2014 to July 2015 (fewer than 52 days after stitch removal, Fitzpatrick's skin types III-IV, mean age = 16.0 years). Blinded evaluators (one plastic surgeon and two dermatologists) evaluated the pre-treatment and post-treatment photographs. The pre-treatment photographs were scored on a spectrum from "0," when no difference with the surrounding unaffected skin was observed, to "100," when the worst scarring was present. The pre-treatment and post-treatment photographs were compared, and the results were graded on a spectrum from 0, when no difference between the pre-treatment and post-treatment photographs was observed, to 100, when no difference was observed between the post-treatment skin and the surrounding unaffected skin. Statistical analyses were performed with PASW 17.0, SPSS Korea, Seoul, Korea (p < 0.05). The improvement scores (ImS) and weighted scores (Wtd: i.e., weighted according to the pre-treatment scores) were used as dependent variables. The average improvement score was 87.98 (median = 90). Seventeen cases were scored as 100-point improvements. The facial and non-facial scars exhibited differences in the ImS and Wtd scores. The Wtd scores were negatively correlated with the temporal gap (in days) between stitch removal and the beginning of CLT. No significant difference in the Wtd scores was demonstrated between the two vascular laser groups. Patient age and Wtd score were negatively correlated, and a significant difference was observed in the Wtd scores between the age groups (≥15 and <15 years old). CLT for ISs results in excellent outcomes. Better results are achieved with earlier CLT initiation following stitch removal. Better outcomes can be expected for younger patients and for facial scars. We found that 532 and 585-nm lasers are equally effective for CLT of ISs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Laser and light-based treatments of venous lakes: a literature review.
- Author
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Mlacker, Stephanie, Shah, Vidhi, Aldahan, Adam, McNamara, Colin, Kamath, Preetha, Nouri, Keyvan, Shah, Vidhi V, Aldahan, Adam S, and McNamara, Colin A
- Subjects
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LASER beams , *BENIGN tumors , *OLDER patients , *QUALITY of life , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *ND-YAG lasers , *BLOOD-vessel abnormalities , *LASERS , *PHOTOTHERAPY , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Venous lake is a benign vascular malformation commonly seen in elderly patients, typically arising in sun-exposed areas of the body. Patients often seek treatment to prevent recurrent bleeding or because they find the lesion cosmetically unacceptable. Venous lake may negatively affect quality of life, due to the cosmetic disfigurement it can create and the resulting psychological distress. Traditional treatments, such as surgical excision, cryosurgery, sclerotherapy, and electrocoagulation, result in varying degrees of success and can cause discomfort. Laser- and light-based treatment modalities may offer a safe and effective alternative, as numerous studies have shown their benefit in the treatment of venous lakes, particularly with the long-pulsed 1064-nm neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG). Although various types of lasers and lights have been studied, there remains a lack of general consensus as to which one is the superior laser modality. Further studies that establish standardized protocols to compare the results of using different types of laser treatments are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Quantitative method for evaluation of aesthetic results after laser treatment for birthmarks.
- Author
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Szychta, Pawel, Al-Nakib, Khalil, Anderson, Will, Stewart, Ken, and Quaba, Awf
- Subjects
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LASER therapy , *AESTHETICS , *NEVUS , *LACTATION consultants , *PHYSICIANS , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Subjective assessment of results after laser treatment for birthmarks does not provide a validated method for clinicians. Previous reports concerning objective evaluation using L*a*b color coordinates were only partially successful due to difficulties in standardizing and comparing colors from pre- and posttreatment photographs. The study aimed to present a reliable and clinically applicable method of aesthetic result assessment after laser treatment for birthmarks. All 48 patients, included in the study, were treated for birthmarks on the face or neck using laser. Each pre- and posttreatment photograph was subjected to triple objective comparative assessment of color fading with use of a computer program, as well as to subjective evaluation by three core physicians and three laypeople. Objective analysis was based on an innovative method using combined L*a*b and hue saturation value color coordinates. Accuracy was higher between objective assessment with the computer program and subjective evaluation by core physicians than by laypeople. Repeatability of results was higher with the use of the computer program than among core physicians or among laypeople. In conclusion, our method may be considered for objective assessment of the results after laser treatment of vascular and pigmented birthmarks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Comparison of the effectiveness of the pulsed dye laser 585 nm versus 595 nm in the treatment of new surgical scars.
- Author
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Nouri, Keyvan, Rivas, Maria, Stevens, Mark, Ballard, Christopher, Singer, Lauren, Ma, Fangchao, Vejjabhinanta, Voraphol, Elsaie, Mohamed, Elgart, George, Rivas, Maria Patricia, Ballard, Christopher J, Elsaie, Mohamed L, and Elgart, George W
- Subjects
- *
DYE lasers , *LASER surgery , *SCARS , *ISCHEMIA , *CLINICAL trials , *WAVELENGTHS , *THERAPEUTICS , *LASER therapy , *HUMAN skin color , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ELASTICITY , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MICROCIRCULATION , *RESEARCH , *SKIN , *SURGICAL complications , *OPERATIVE surgery , *SUTURES , *EVALUATION research , *BLIND experiment - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the effects of the pulsed-dye laser (PDL) at a wavelength of 585 nm with those at 595 nm in the treatment of post-surgical scars, starting on the day of suture removal. The study was a prospective, non-randomized, double-blind, controlled, clinical trial, set in an outpatient clinic. Fifteen outpatients with 21 post-operative scars at least 3 cm long were recruited, and 14 patients with 19 scars completed the study. Scars were divided into three equal portions. Each outer portion was randomly allocated to PDL at 585 nm or at 595 nm (3.5 J/cm2, 450 μs, 10 mm spot size), and the center was an untreated control; treatment was composed of three laser sessions at 4-week intervals. A blinded examiner evaluated the three scar sections using the Vancouver scar scale for pigmentation, vascularity, pliability, and height. Cosmetic appearance was evaluated with a visual analog scale. Punch biopsies of three randomly selected scars were evaluated. Pigmentation: more scars after laser treatments were of normal color than in the control, but the difference was not statistically significant. Vascularity: after treatment, more scars had normal vascularity in all three groups than at baseline ( P < 0.05); the largest increase was with a wavelength of 585 nm (10.5–94.7%), then 595 nm (15.8–78.9%), then control (5.2–36.6%). Pliability: there was more normal pliability in all three groups than at baseline ( P < 0.05), with greater improvements in the laser-treated groups. Height: significantly more flat scars after 585 nm PDL (63.2%) than at baseline (21.1%) ( P < 0.05). We observed a slight but non-significant decrease in the scar heights with 595 nm PDL in comparison with the control. Histology: after laser irradiation, the treated sections were more similar to a non-scarring process than the control. Cosmetic outcome: visual analog scales increased in all groups ( P < 0.05), but the greatest increases were observed in the 585 nm and 595 nm laser-treated groups (50% and 60%, respectively) compared with controls (30%). There were significantly higher scores with the lasers than for the control ( P < 0.001) at each visit after baseline. Both the 585 nm and 595 nm PDL treatments were effective in improving the appearance and normalizing the vascularity and pliability of post-operative scars. Both wavelengths improved the scars’ visual appearance more than controls. We found that 585 nm appears to be the preferred wavelength, as it substantially normalized the height in addition to the vascularity and pliability in a significant number of scars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Quantitative method for evaluation of aesthetic results after laser treatment for birthmarks
- Author
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Pawel Szychta, A.A. Quaba, William Anderson, Ken Stewart, and Khalil Al-Nakib
- Subjects
Partially successful ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Port-Wine Stain ,Color ,Lasers, Dye ,Objective analysis ,Skin Pigmentation ,Dermatology ,PDL ,Objective assessment ,Validation ,medicine ,Photography ,Humans ,Medical physics ,Birthmark ,Reliability (statistics) ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Laser treatment ,CIELAB ,HSV ,Vascular lesion ,medicine.disease ,Reliability ,Surgery ,Port wine stain ,Treatment Outcome ,Face ,Original Article ,Objective evaluation ,Pulsed dye laser ,business ,Color coordinates ,Neck ,Software - Abstract
Subjective assessment of results after laser treatment for birthmarks does not provide a validated method for clinicians. Previous reports concerning objective evaluation using L*a*b color coordinates were only partially successful due to difficulties in standardizing and comparing colors from pre- and posttreatment photographs. The study aimed to present a reliable and clinically applicable method of aesthetic result assessment after laser treatment for birthmarks. All 48 patients, included in the study, were treated for birthmarks on the face or neck using laser. Each pre- and posttreatment photograph was subjected to triple objective comparative assessment of color fading with use of a computer program, as well as to subjective evaluation by three core physicians and three laypeople. Objective analysis was based on an innovative method using combined L*a*b and hue saturation value color coordinates. Accuracy was higher between objective assessment with the computer program and subjective evaluation by core physicians than by laypeople. Repeatability of results was higher with the use of the computer program than among core physicians or among laypeople. In conclusion, our method may be considered for objective assessment of the results after laser treatment of vascular and pigmented birthmarks.
- Published
- 2012
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