| Literature DB >> 25624768 |
Lori A Brightman1, Roy G Geronemus1, Kavitha K Reddy2.
Abstract
Port-wine stains are a type of capillary malformation affecting 0.3% to 0.5% of the population. Port-wine stains present at birth as pink to erythematous patches on the skin and/or mucosa. Without treatment, the patches typically darken with age and may eventually develop nodular thickening or associated pyogenic granuloma. Laser and light treatments provide improvement through selective destruction of vasculature. A variety of vascular-selective lasers may be employed, with the pulsed dye laser being the most common and well studied. Early treatment produces more optimal results. Advances in imaging and laser treatment technologies demonstrate potential to further improve clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: capillary vascular malformation; intense pulsed light; laser; photodynamic therapy; port-wine stain; selective photothermolysis; vascular birthmark
Year: 2015 PMID: 25624768 PMCID: PMC4296879 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S53118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Figure 1An untreated facial capillary malformation (port-wine stain) in a 60-year-old man who presented with a complaint of progressive darkening and development of nodularity in his adult years.
Vascular-selective lasers for treatment of CMs (also called port-wine stains)
| Laser/light source | Wavelength (nm) | Epidermal cooling mechanism | Skin phototypes | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argon | 488–514 | None | I–III | First-generation laser; increased rate of scarring; has largely fallen out of use |
| Krypton | 520–530 | None | I–III | First-generation laser; increased rate of scarring; has largely fallen out of use |
| Frequency-doubled Nd:YAG; potassium titanyl phosphate | 532 | Contact cooling or other | I–III | Studied primarily for resistant and residual CMs; can represent initial treatment choice |
| Copper bromide/copper vapor | 578 | None | I–III | First-generation lasers; increased rate of scarring; have largely fallen out of use |
| Pulsed dye laser (PDL) | 585–595 | Cryogen spray cooling | I–IV | Most commonly used and most well studied; gold standard for pediatric vascular birthmarks |
| Alexandrite | 755 | Cryogen spray cooling | I–IV | Primarily for dark or resistant CMs |
| Diode | 800–940 | Cryogen spray cooling or other | I–IV | May be used for CMs; more common for hair removal, venous lakes, endovenous ablation |
| Nd:YAG | 1,064 | Cryogen spray cooling | I–VI | Primarily for dark or resistant CMs; increased penetration depth; less absorption by melanin; increased risk of ulceration or scarring |
| Intense pulsed light | 390–1,200; modifiable using filters | Variable; gel | I–IV | Less effective than laser treatment; may be preferred by patients for non-purpuric treatment |
| Photodynamic therapy | Varies; optimally matched to photosensitizer peak absorption wavelength | Typically not needed; fan optional | I–VI | Less commonly used; typically intravenous injection of photosensitizer with photosensitivity persisting for days to weeks; good-to-excellent results when compared to PDL |
Abbreviations: CM, capillary malformation; Nd:YAG, neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet; PDL, pulsed dye laser.
Figure 2An adult woman with a previously untreated capillary malformation at the left temple that had developed darkening and nodularity.
Notes: The capillary malformation is shown before treatment (A) and with excellent improvement after two sessions of pulsed dye laser (B).
Figure 3A previously untreated capillary malformation (port-wine stain) at the right thigh.
Notes: The capillary malformation is shown before treatment (A) and after one session of 532 nm potassium titanyl phosphate laser treatment (B). Area C is an untreated control; quadrants 1–4 were treated at 6–9 J/cm2, 6–8 mm, 3–4 ms, with 5°C sapphire contact cooling. Scars are present at biopsy sites.