28 results match your criteria: "Institute for Laser Medicine[Affiliation]"
Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed
February 1999
Institute for Laser Medicine, Vienna, Austria.
Chronic skin ulcers still represent a therapeutic challenge in dermatology. Among the various non-invasive treatment modalities used for the improvement of impaired wound healing, low-intensity laser irradiations are gaining an increasing body of interest. We used low-intensity laser irradiations delivered by a 30 mW helium-neon laser at an energy density of 30 J/cm2 three times weekly for the induction of wound healing in ulcers of diverse causes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Laser Med Surg
June 1998
Institute for Laser Medicine, Florence, Italy.
Background And Objectives: The objectives of this study is to treat the cases of fibromyositic rheumatisms untreatable with other therapies. The authors chose defocalized laser beams because some experimental studies had showed their analgesic and anti-phlogistic effects on experimental phlogosis. Since 1980 non-surgical laser effects were often noncomparable because of the lack of common treatment protocols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife Sci
May 1997
Institute for Laser-Medicine, Klosterneuburg, Austria.
Low power laser irradiation has been shown to have various immune-modulatory effects under in vitro conditions but little is known about such effects in animal models. Escherichia coli endotoxin-preimmunized rabbits were used to determine the influence of transcutaneously applied low power laser light on differential blood count and rectal temperature. After three initial immunizations animals were either boostered with 5 ng/kg of endotoxin or injected with pyrogen-free saline and subsequently underwent irradiation using two different wavelengths of red laser light and sham irradiation, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF