Modeling laser treatment of port wine stains with a computer-reconstructed biopsy

T. J. Pfefer, J. K. Barton, D. J. Smithies, T. E. Milner, J. S. Nelson, M. J. van Gemert, A. J. Welch

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Abstract

The efficacy of laser treatment of port wine stains (PWS) has been shown to be highly dependent on patient-specific vasculature. The effect of tissue structure on optical and thermal mechanisms was investigated for different pulse durations by using a novel theoretical model that incorporates tissue morphology reconstructed tomographically from a PWS biopsy. An optical-thermal numerical model capable of simulating arbitrarily complex, three-dimensional tissue geometries was developed. The model is comprised of (1) a voxel-based Monte Carlo optical model, (2) a finite difference thermal model, and (3) an Arrhenius rate process calculation to predict the distribution of thermal damage. Simulations based on previous computer-based reconstruction of a series of 6 microm sections from a PWS biopsy were performed for laser pulse durations (taup) of 0.5, 5.0, and 10.0 ms at a wavelength of 585 nm. Energy deposition rate in the blood vessels was primarily a function of vessel depth in skin, although shading effects were evident. Thermal confinement and selectivity of damage were seen to be inversely proportional to pulse duration. The model predicted blood-specific damage for taup = 0.5 ms, vascular and perivascular damage for taup = 5 ms, and widespread damage in superficial regions for taup = 10 ms. The effect of energy deposition in the epidermis was most pronounced for longer pulse durations, resulting in increased temperature and extent of damage. Pulse durations between 0.5 and 5 ms are likely optimal for the PWS analyzed. The incorporation of a tomographically reconstructed PWS biopsy into an optical-thermal model represents a significant advance in numerical modeling of laser-tissue interaction
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)151-166
JournalLasers in surgery and medicine
Volume24
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 1999

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