OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to compare conventional surgery with carbon dioxide (CO(2)) laser applied on oral soft tissue pathologies and to evaluate the effect of collateral thermal damage on histopathological diagnosis. Anesthesia need, postoperative pain, and intraoperative and postoperative complications were examined as part of the comparison. METHODS:Forty-three patients (32 female and 11 male) with a mean age of 54 (54 +/- 7.0) requiring soft tissue surgeries were randomly assigned to receive treatment either with conventional surgery using a scalpel or with a CO(2) laser technique. Anesthesia method and need, postoperative pain, systemic pain medications if needed, and intra- and postoperative complications were recorded. Excised tissues were evaluated histopathologically for the effect of thermal damage. RESULTS: All patients were anesthetized with local anesthesia in the conventional group whereas only 10 (42%) patients needed local anesthesia after topical anesthetic application in the laser group. In the conventional group, 18 (90%) patients need analgesics after the operation, compared with seven (29%) patients in the laser group. No intra- or postoperative complications were seen for either procedure. Histological examination of 39 specimens showed that collateral thermal damage on the incision line did not affect the histopathological diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS:CO(2) laser is an effective instrument for soft tissue excisional biopsies with minimal intraoperative and postoperative complications and good pain control. CO(2) laser applications are suggested as an alternative method to conventional surgery on oral soft tissues.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to compare conventional surgery with carbon dioxide (CO(2)) laser applied on oral soft tissue pathologies and to evaluate the effect of collateral thermal damage on histopathological diagnosis. Anesthesia need, postoperative pain, and intraoperative and postoperative complications were examined as part of the comparison. METHODS: Forty-three patients (32 female and 11 male) with a mean age of 54 (54 +/- 7.0) requiring soft tissue surgeries were randomly assigned to receive treatment either with conventional surgery using a scalpel or with a CO(2) laser technique. Anesthesia method and need, postoperative pain, systemic pain medications if needed, and intra- and postoperative complications were recorded. Excised tissues were evaluated histopathologically for the effect of thermal damage. RESULTS: All patients were anesthetized with local anesthesia in the conventional group whereas only 10 (42%) patients needed local anesthesia after topical anesthetic application in the laser group. In the conventional group, 18 (90%) patients need analgesics after the operation, compared with seven (29%) patients in the laser group. No intra- or postoperative complications were seen for either procedure. Histological examination of 39 specimens showed that collateral thermal damage on the incision line did not affect the histopathological diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS:CO(2) laser is an effective instrument for soft tissue excisional biopsies with minimal intraoperative and postoperative complications and good pain control. CO(2) laser applications are suggested as an alternative method to conventional surgery on oral soft tissues.
Authors: Waseem Jerjes; Tahwinder Upile; Zaid Hamdoon; Mohammed Al-Khawalde; Mira Morcos; Charles Alexander Mosse; Colin Hopper Journal: Lasers Med Sci Date: 2011-04-15 Impact factor: 3.161
Authors: Andreas Braun; Moritz Kettner; Michael Berthold; Johannes-Simon Wenzler; Paul Günther Baptist Heymann; Roland Frankenberger Journal: Lasers Med Sci Date: 2017-09-09 Impact factor: 3.161
Authors: Sahji Thomas; Vikram Singh Boparai; Virendra Kumar Tiwari; Bipin T Varghese; P G Balagopal; Elizabeth Mathew Iype; Nebu Abraham George; Deepak Janardhan Journal: Indian J Surg Oncol Date: 2018-06-30