Novel 40 µm spot size 3050/3200 nm DFG laser versus CO 2 laser for laser-assisted drug delivery
The use of ablative fractional lasers to enhance the delivery of topical drugs through the skin is known as laser-assisted drug delivery. Here, we compare a novel 3050/3200 nm difference frequency generation (DFG) fiber laser (spot size: 40 µm) to a commercially used CO laser (spot size: 120 µm). Th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Lasers in surgery and medicine 2024-02, Vol.56 (2), p.186-196 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The use of ablative fractional lasers to enhance the delivery of topical drugs through the skin is known as laser-assisted drug delivery. Here, we compare a novel 3050/3200 nm difference frequency generation (DFG) fiber laser (spot size: 40 µm) to a commercially used CO
laser (spot size: 120 µm). The objective is to determine whether differences in spot size and coagulation zone (CZ) thickness influence drug uptake.
Fractional ablation was performed on ex-vivo human abdominal skin with the DFG (5 mJ) and CO
(12 mJ) lasers to generate 680 µm deep lesions. To evaluate drug delivery, 30 kDa encapsulated fluorescent dye was topically applied to the skin and histologically analyzed at skin depths of 100, 140, 200, 400, and 600 µm. Additionally, transcutaneous permeation of encapsulated and 350 Da nonencapsulated dye was assessed using Franz Cells.
The DFG laser generated smaller channels (diameter: 56.5 µm) with thinner CZs (thickness: 22.4 µm) than the CO
laser (diameter: 75.9 µm, thickness: 66.8 µm). The DFG laser treated group exhibited significantly higher encapsulated dye total fluorescence intensities after 3 h compared to the CO
laser treated group across all skin depths (p |
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ISSN: | 0196-8092 1096-9101 |
DOI: | 10.1002/lsm.23755 |