Laser Treatment of Cutaneous Vascular Lesions
Introduction
Coagulate vessels often need multiple treatments before they can be destroyed. Current technologies are limited by the finite penetration depth of light and by the natural flow characteristics of blood vessels in tissue. As a result, clinical procedures are often unsuccessful at treating hypervascular lesions.
Invention Description
This invention is based on a parent patent and considered an extension. The laser doses required are dramatically reduced over other hypervascular lesion treatment methods by using hyperosmotic chemical agents applied prior to laser irradiation. These chemical agents include, but are not limited to, glycerol, dimethyl sulfoxide, sucrose, and glucose. After desired optical and morphological changes are induced, laser radiation is applied to the lesion-reducing scattering in the biological tissue and reduction and cessation of flow in arterioles and venules. The changes allow the laser to thus be more directly applied to the vessels and concurrently reduce the required energy to destroy a given vessel.
Benefits
- Reduces scattering in tissue
- Reduces number of laser doses needed to destroy vessel
- Changes from chemical agents alone are reversible
- When coupled with laser radiation, use of agents results in permanent blood vessel coagulation
Features
- Delivers sufficient laser energy to a targeted blood vessel to destroy the vessel without damage to the epidermis and dermis
- Utilizes hyperosmotic chemical agents
Market Potential/Applications
Could have significant impact on the clinical treatment of hypervascular lesions or other subsurface tissue targets.
Development Stage
Proof of concept completed.
IP Status
One U.S. Patent Application filed
UT Researcher
Ashley J. Welch, Ph.D., Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin
Thomas Milner, Ph.D., Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin
For further information please contact
University of Texas,
Austin, USA
Website : www.otc.utexas.edu