Publications by authors named "Garuna Kositratna"

Cutaneous discoid lupus erythematosus (CDLE) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease often resulting in permanent scarring of the affected area. Fractional photothermolysis (FP) is a well-known inducer of tissue regeneration by wounding the skin in a fractional pattern, hence inducing a well defined, wound healing response. It has been used clinically to treat atrophic as well as hypertrophic scars and also fibrotic diseases like morphea since more than a decade.

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Visualization and quantification of the skin microvasculature are important for studying the health of the human microcirculation. We correlated structural and pathophysiological changes of the dermal capillary-level microvasculature with age and blood pressure by using the reactive hyperemia optical coherence tomography angiography (RH-OCT-A) technique and evaluated both conventional OCT-A and the RH-OCT-A method as non-invasive imaging alternatives to histopathology. This observational pilot study acquired OCT-A and RH-OCT-A images of the dermal microvasculature of 13 young and 12 old healthy Caucasian female subjects.

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Article Synopsis
  • A recent study explored the effectiveness of a new 5,500 nm wavelength carbon monoxide (CO) laser for medical applications, noting its higher optical penetration and potential benefits for tissue treatments compared to traditional CO lasers and thulium fiber lasers.
  • The research involved testing various laser systems on ex vivo human skin samples to analyze their ablation and coagulation abilities under similar exposure conditions.
  • Results indicated that the CO laser achieved significantly deeper ablation compared to the CO laser, suggesting its potential for advanced skin resurfacing and other medical uses.
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Background: Traditionally, fractional laser treatments are performed with focused laser sources operating at a fixed wavelength. Using a tunable laser in the mid-infrared wavelength range, wavelength-dependent absorption properties on the ablation process and thermal damage formation were assessed with the goal to obtain customizable tissue ablations to provide guidance in finding optimized laser exposure parameters for clinical applications.

Methods: Laser tissue experiments were carried out on full thickness ex vivo human abdominal skin using a mid-infrared tunable chromium-doped zinc selenide/sulfide chalcogenide laser.

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Article Synopsis
  • Fractional Photothermolysis (FP) creates tiny columns of thermal damage in the skin using focused laser beams, but deviation from the focal plane can lead to larger damage spots and inconsistent treatment outcomes.
  • The study aimed to determine how variations in distance from the focal plane affect the depth and diameter of laser-induced skin lesions using an ablative fractional laser on human skin samples.
  • Results showed that distance variations significantly impacted the lesion size, confirming the importance of maintaining the correct distance during FP treatments.
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Background: Ablative fractional laser procedures have been shown to facilitate topical drug delivery into the skin. Past studies have mainly used ex vivo models to demonstrate enhanced drug delivery and in vivo studies have investigated laser created channels over a time course of days and weeks rather than within the first few minutes and hours after exposures. We have noticed rapid in vivo fibrin plug formation within ablative fractional laser lesions impairing passage through the laser created channels.

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The pathophysiology of acne vulgaris depends on active sebaceous glands, implying that selective destruction of sebaceous glands could be an effective treatment. We hypothesized that light-absorbing microparticles could be delivered into sebaceous glands, enabling local injury by optical pulses. A suspension of topically applied gold-coated silica microparticles exhibiting plasmon resonance with strong absorption at 800 nm was delivered into human pre-auricular and swine sebaceous glands in vivo, using mechanical vibration.

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Skin vaccination has gained increasing attention in the last two decades due to its improved potency compared to intramuscular vaccination. Yet, the technical difficulty and frequent local reactions hamper its broad application in the clinic. In the current study, micro-fractional epidermal powder delivery (EPD) is developed to facilitate skin vaccination and minimize local adverse effects.

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The need for patient-specific photodynamic therapy (PDT) in dermatologic and oncologic applications has triggered several studies that explore the utility of surrogate parameters as predictive reporters of treatment outcome. Although photosensitizer (PS) fluorescence, a widely used parameter, can be viewed as emission from several fluorescent states of the PS (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers irradiated human skin and used advanced techniques to analyze changes in gene expression at 2 and 24 hours post-treatment.
  • * The findings highlight significant upregulation of genes like Wnt5a, CYR61, and HSP90, suggesting these proteins play a key role in the skin's response to laser therapy and may contribute to the treatment's effectiveness.
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Full-surface laser ablation has been shown to efficiently disrupt stratum corneum and facilitate transcutaneous drug delivery, but it is frequently associated with skin damage that hampers its clinic use. We show here that a safer ablative fractional laser (AFL) can sufficiently facilitate delivery of not only patch-coated hydrophilic drugs but also protein vaccines. AFL treatment generated an array of self renewable microchannels (MCs) in the skin, providing free paths for drug and vaccine delivery into the dermis while maintaining integrity of the skin by quick healing of the MCs.

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