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      Photodynamic therapy of port-wine stains: long-term efficacy and complication in Chinese patients.

      The Journal of Dermatology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Port-wine stain (PWS) are congenital vascular malformations characterized by ectatic capillaries in the papillary layer of the dermis. They usually appear at birth and tend to become darker and thicker with age. Many clinicians consider the gold standard to treat PWS is pulsed dye laser (PDL) with wavelengths of 585 nm or 595 nm. But PDL is not suitable for patients with Fitzpatrick skin type V or nodular lesions. Vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy (PDT) might be an alternative approach in the treatment of such patients. The objective of this study was to assess the long-term outcomes and complications of PDT therapy of PWS in Chinese patients retrospectively. Patients with PWS who had received PDT therapy in a 5-year period were reviewed. 642 patients and a total of 3066 treatment sessions had been performed with an average of 2.6-8.2 sessions. Over 5% of patients had complete clearing, while 70% of patients had more than 25% of clearing. More than one-quarter of patients (29.8%) experienced a clearing of more than 50%. Ten percent of patients experienced complications (1.4% blistering, 1.2% hypopigmentation, 4.3% hyperpigmentation, 2.2% scabbing, <0.7% prolonged blistering that persisted for >2 months, 0.4% eczema dermatitis, 0.6% photoallergy). Sex, age, number of treatment sessions, average energy density and type of skin were not related to complication rate using the multiple regression analysis. Chinese patients were well responsive to and satisfied with vascular-targeted PDT (Patient Satisfaction Score 7.8). Dark-skinned patients and patients with vascular papules or nodules can be treated with alternative PDT to significant therapeutic effect in Chinese patients even though they experience few complications.

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          Selective photothermolysis: precise microsurgery by selective absorption of pulsed radiation

          Suitably brief pulses of selectively absorbed optical radiation can cause selective damage to pigmented structures, cells, and organelles in vivo. Precise aiming is unnecessary in this unique form of radiation injury because inherent optical and thermal properties provide target selectivity. A simple, predictive model is presented. Selective damage to cutaneous microvessels and to melanosomes within melanocytes is shown after 577-nanometer (3 x 10(-7) second) and 351-nanometer (2 x 10(-8) second) pulses, respectively. Hemodynamic, histological, and ultrastructural responses are discussed.
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            The incidence and significance of birthmarks in a cohort of 4,641 newborns.

            An unselected cohort of 4,641 newborns was ascertained prospectively for the purpose of detecting any cutaneous lesion. These were catalogued into pigmented lesions, vascular lesions, and miscellaneous lesions. Several important findings were elucidated: congenital nevocellular nevi are speckled at their borders; no white newborn in the study had more than one café au lait mark; a hypopigmented tuft of hair was seen in one infant with tuberous sclerosis but is found more commonly in normal individuals; a previously undescribed lesion called zosteriform melanocytic nevus was seen as a normal pigmentary variant in blacks; and hypopigmented macules seen at birth are seen primarily in normal infants. It is hoped that these findings will allow the pediatrician and dermatologist to offer more meaningful prognostic information to their patients.
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              Vascular and Cellular Targeting for Photodynamic Therapy

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                22032688
                10.1111/j.1346-8138.2011.01292.x

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