Thermal Injury Patterns and Tensile Strength of Canine Oral Mucosa After Carbon Dioxide Laser Incisions
- 1 July 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 106 (7) , 845-850
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005537-199607000-00012
Abstract
The amount of collateral damage in laser surgery is affected by the precision of the beam delivery. To test a new control system, the authors of this study produced surgical incisions in the canine oral mucosa and then documented histologic and tensile strength changes during the wound healing process. The incisions were made by three different methods: scalpel, manually controlled carbon dioxide (CO2) laser, and computer-controlled CO2 laser. Both types of laser incisions took longer to heal than the scalpel incisions. The laser incisons were accompanied by a zone of thermal damage lateral to the incision. With the computer-controlled laser incision, the area of thermal damage was reduced, the laserinduced delay in wound healing was less, and tensile strength was relatively greater. The data indicate that surgical performance is improved by critical beam control. Laryngoscope, 106:845-850, 1996Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Computer‐assisted surgical techniques using the vanderbilt free electron laserThe Laryngoscope, 1994
- Preliminary analysis of histological results of Hexascan™ device with continuous tunable dye laser at 514 (argon) and 577 NM (yellow)Lasers in Surgery and Medicine, 1993
- Sub ablation effects of the KTP laser on wound healingLasers in Surgery and Medicine, 1993
- Wound Healing in Porcine Skin Following Low-output Carbon Dioxide Laser Irradiation of the IncisionAnnals of Plastic Surgery, 1987
- A comparative histological study of wound healing following CO2 laser and conventional surgical excision of canine buccal mucosaArchives of Oral Biology, 1982
- Experimental skin incision made with the carbon dioxide laserThe Laryngoscope, 1982
- Wound healing after laser surgery: An experimental studyBritish Journal of Surgery, 1980
- Laser wound healing compared with other surgical modalitiesBurns, 1974
- The healing of tissues incised by a carbon-dioxide laserBritish Journal of Surgery, 1971
- Studies in the management of the contaminated wound: IV. Resistance to infection of surgical wounds made by knife, electrosurgery, and laserThe American Journal of Surgery, 1970