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Soft Tissue Wound Healing by Laser
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of nanotechnology and nanomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2476-2334
DOI - 10.33140/ijnn/03/01/00002
Subject(s) - placebo , medicine , randomized controlled trial , surgery , wound healing , pathology , alternative medicine
Background: In 1967 a few years after the first working laser was invented, Endre Mester in Semmelweis University Budapest,Hungary wanted to find out if laser might cause cancer. He took some mice, shaved the hair off their backs, divided them intotwo groups and gave a laser treatment with a low powered ruby laser to one group. They did not get cancer and to his surprisethe hair on the treated group grew back more quickly than the untreated group. That was how “laser biostimulation” effectswere discovered.(Effect of laser on hair Growth of mice (in Hungarian). Mester, E. Szende, B. and Tota, J.G. (1967). Kiserl Orvostud 19. 628-631).Purpose of the work: The effects of pulsed monochromatic light, with fixed pulsations and wavelengths, on the healing ofpressure ulcers were evaluated in this prospective, randomized, controlled study.Method: A placebo-controlled, double-blind study using low energy photon therapy (LLLT) was performed in ten patientswith bedsore on the back. Treatment was given three times a week for 10 weeks, using monochromatic (red) optical sources;diode 660nm (GaAl- 660). The patients who were randomized to placebo treatment received sham therapy from an identicalappearing light source from the same delivery system.Results: Ten patients with bedsore were randomized to receive LLLT or placebo therapy. At the conclusion of the study, thepercentage of the initial ulcer area remaining unhealed in the LLLT and placebo groups was 24.4% and 84.7%, respectively (P= 0.0008). The decrease in ulcer area (compared to baseline) observed in the LLLT and placebo groups was 193.0 mm2 and14.7 mm2, respectively (P = 0.0002). One patient dropped out of the study, complaining of lack of treatment efficacy; he wasfound to be randomized to the placebo group. There were no adverse effects.Conclusions: In this placebo-controlled, double-blind study LLLT was an effective modality for the treatment of bedsore whichwere resistant to conventional medical management.The results are encouraging as pulsed monochromatic light increased healing rate and shortened healing time. This willpositively affect the quality of life in elderly patients with pressure ulcers.

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