Wound healing after laser surgery: An experimental study

Author:

Cochrane J P S1,Beacon J P1,Creasey G H1,Russell R C G1

Affiliation:

1. Westminster Hospital, London and Department of Surgical Studies, The Middlesex Hospital, London

Abstract

Summary Healing after carbon dioxide laser incisions has been assessed in three animal experiments. Nine incisions in pig skin were found to be significantly weaker after 7 days than similar incisions made with a scalpel, but stronger than those made with a cutting diathermy. Laser excision of skin discs in pigs provided a satisfactory base to take split-skin grafts, but graft take around the edges was less complete than after scalpel excisions. Division and anasto mosis of the colon of 75 rats showed that the laser produced anastomoses that were as strong after 7 days as those produced by scalpel or diathermy division, but the laser did not produce the narrowing of the lumen that occurred with diathermy. It is concluded that if epithelial surfaces are particularly thick and slow to cut with the laser then thermal damage wili impair healing, but that in general epithelial surfaces need not be avoided in laser surgery.

Funder

Middlesex Hospital

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

Reference13 articles.

1. Partial hepatectomies with a hand-held laser knife: an experimental study;Orda;Br. J. Surg.,1977

2. Liver resections with the continuous wave carbon-dioxide laser: some experimental observations;Mullins;Am. Surg.,1968

3. Haemostatic incision of the liver: carbondioxide laser compared with surgical diathermy;Hall;Br. J. Surg.,1971

4. Use of carbon dioxide laser for large excisions with minimal blood loss;Slutzki;Plast. Reconstr. Surg.,1977

5. Use of the carbon dioxide laser in an abdominoperineal resection for epidermoid anal carcinoma: a case report;Shafir;Br. J. Surg.,1978

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