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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 93, 494-501, Copyright © 1987 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
J Eugene, ME Pollock, SJ McColgan, M Hammer-Wilson, MW Berns and GR Mason
The standard surgical lasers, argon ion, neodymium-yttrium aluminum garnet,
and carbon dioxide, are often operated as continuous wave lasers with
specific uses. Clinical trials of laser therapy for arteriosclerotic
cardiovascular disease are underway with all three lasers. Therefore, we
compared these three lasers under controlled experimental conditions. A
thoracoabdominal exploration was performed in 17 arteriosclerotic rabbits.
The aorta was isolated, heparin administered, and multiple endarterectomies
were performed in each rabbit with each of the lasers. A line of laser
craters was created at the proximal and distal ends of an atheroma.
Continuous-wave laser radiation was used to connect the craters and thereby
form proximal and distal end points. The plaques were dissected free from
the aorta with laser light and the end points were fused by laser. The
aortas were removed for light microscopy and the animals were killed. The
endarterectomy surfaces and end points were serially sectioned and graded
according to light microscopic findings (1 = worst, 4 = best). Argon ion
laser endarterectomy (N = 16) required 106 +/- 10 J/cm2. The surface score
was 3.5 and end point score 3.4. Neodymium-yttrium aluminum garnet laser
endarterectomy (N = 13) required 1,289 +/- 115 J/cm2 with a surface score
of 2.4 (p less than 0.001 from argon ion) and an end point score of 1.3 (p
less than 0.001 from argon ion). Carbon dioxide laser endarterectomy (N =
9) required 30 +/- 5J/cm2 with a surface score of 2.0 (p less than 0.001
from argon ion) and and end point score of 1.6 (p less than 0.001 from
argon ion). Perforation occurred in one of 16 argon ion studies (technical
error, not laser), in 11 of 13 neodymium-yttrium aluminum garnet studies,
and in six of nine carbon dioxide studies. This study demonstrates that of
the currently available clinical continuous-wave lasers, the argon ion
laser is superior for endarterectomy of experimental atheromas.
ARTICLES
Comparison of continuous-wave lasers for endarterectomy of experimental atheromas
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J. Eugene, R. A. Ott, Y. Baribeau, S. J. McColgan, M. W. Berns, and G. R. Mason Initial Trial of Argon Ion Laser Endarterectomy for Peripheral Vascular Disease Arch Surg, August 1, 1990; 125(8): 1007 - 1011. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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