Thirty-six deep hepatic lesions of localized photocoagulation were induced in 11 pigs by means of a neodymium-YAG laser. Laser applications of 80 W/10 sec (10.190 W/cm2) were transmitted through a handpiece coupled to a water-cooling circulation system to protect the quartz fiber and positioned through an echo-guided trocar. During irradiation, temperature was sufficient for vaporization up to 5 mm from the laser source and high enough for tumor cell kill at a 10-mm distance (54 degrees C/60 sec). Intraoperative ultrasound visualized increasing photocoagulation (12-18 mm), and further controls demonstrated an echo-free core of vaporization progressively covered by increasing fibrosis, well demarcated from normal parenchyma. Microscopy revealed central coagulative necrosis marginated from the third day by a growing fibrosis. By day 20 immunoblasts and mast cells were in profusion in the lesion border, and by day 120 a fibrotic network had invaded the scar and confirmed healing free of complication. This technique is proposed for deep vaporization of disseminated hepatic metastases.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lsm.1900080509DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

deep localized
4
localized neodymium
4
neodymium nd-yag
4
laser
4
nd-yag laser
4
laser photocoagulation
4
photocoagulation liver
4
liver water
4
water cooled
4
cooled echoguided
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!