Blood flow dynamics after laser therapy of port wine stain birthmarks

Abstract

Background and Objective: During laser therapy of port wine stain birthmarks, regions of perfusionmay persist. We hypothesize that such regions are not readily observable even when laser surgery is performed by highly experienced clinicians. The objective of this study was to use objective feedback to assess the acute vascular response to laser therapy. Study Design/Materials and Methods: A clinic-friendly laser speckle imaging instrument was developed to provide the clinician with real-time images of blood flow during laser therapy. Images were acquired from patients undergoing laser therapy of PWS birthmarks at Scripps Clinic and the Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic. Blood flow maps were extracted from the acquired imaging data. Histogram-based analysis was applied in grading the degree of heterogeneity present in the blood flow maps after laser therapy. Results: Collectively, two types of patient responses were observed in response to laser exposure: an immediate increase in perfusion within minutes after laser therapy; and an overall decrease in blood perfusion ∼1 hour after laser therapy, with distinct regions of persistent perfusion apparent in the majority of post-treatment blood-flow images. A comparison of blood flow in PWS and adjacent normal skin demonstrated that PWS blood flow can be greater than, or sometimes equivalent to, that of normal skin. Conclusion: In general, a decrease in skin perfusion is observed during pulsed laser therapy of PWS birthmarks. However, a heterogeneous perfusion map was frequently observed. These regions of persistent perfusion may be due to incomplete photocoagulation of the targeted vessels. We hypothesize that immediate retreatment of these regions identified with LSI, will result in enhanced removal of the PWS vasculature. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Author Profiles

Binna Choi
University of New South Wales
Kiana Kelly
University of Texas at San Antonio
Yao Cheng Huang
San Francisco State University

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