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Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser

BACKGROUND: Postoperative scarring is a common cause of patients dissatisfaction. Several modalities have been developed to overcome such a problem following surgical repair. Despite precise surgical technique, still, some scars would remain over the time, mostly due to the weak formation or inadequ...

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Autores principales: Mossaad, Aida, Kotb, Amr, Abdelrahaman, Moustapha, Ahmady, Hatem Al
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Republic of Macedonia 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6062293/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30087726
http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2018.250
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author Mossaad, Aida
Kotb, Amr
Abdelrahaman, Moustapha
Ahmady, Hatem Al
author_facet Mossaad, Aida
Kotb, Amr
Abdelrahaman, Moustapha
Ahmady, Hatem Al
author_sort Mossaad, Aida
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Postoperative scarring is a common cause of patients dissatisfaction. Several modalities have been developed to overcome such a problem following surgical repair. Despite precise surgical technique, still, some scars would remain over the time, mostly due to the weak formation or inadequately replaced collagen fibres in the underneath dermis especially those following unilateral or bilateral cleft lip repair surgery. AIM: of this study is to evaluate whether a 10,600 nm fractional ablative carbon dioxide (CO(2)) used early during the healing period would result in better postoperative scars. METHODS: In the present study six patients complained from cleft lip scars resulting from lip revision surgery. Each patient had six fractional ablative CO(2) laser sessions for treatment along six months to obtain a complete collagen cycle. Vancouver Scar Scale VSS was used as a method of evaluation of the scar using 4 points scale evaluating vascularity, pliability, thickness & colour of the skin and Visual Analogue Scale VAS from (0-10) was used to assess the severity of pain as well as a survey questionnaire for the rate of patient’s satisfaction. Also, digital clinical photos assessment before&after were compared. RESULTS: Patients expressed a significantly greater degree of satisfaction with the treatment using a subjective 4-point scale. All patients observed dramatic improvement in their lip scars after FCO(2) laser sessions following their surgeries with the better psychological state. The assessment was done by clinical observation according to VSS before (9.17 ± 2.2) while after (3.33 ± 1.9) with a highly significant P value <0.001 and VAS for the rate of pain & satisfaction that ranged from (8.0 ± 0.9) as well as series of photos taken before and after the procedure. No long-term complications were noted however patients complained of annoying pain during the session as well as crust formation that lasted up to 5 days after surgery. In the present study, we introduce the effectiveness of ablative fractional 10,600 nm CO(2) laser for treatment of postoperative cleft lip scar after secondary surgical cleft repair rather than ablative CO(2) due to its reported complications such as postoperative infection, erythema and pigmentary changes along with prolonged downtime healing. In the current study, we chose early laser treatment within the first six months before complete collagen organisation which will be easier to manage the older scars. Patients mostly complained about the pain during the session as well as dark-coloured crust formation post session that stayed from 3-5 days however they all observed a massive improvement of their scars following treatment protocol. CONCLUSION: Facial wounds sutured in layers heal in a good manner. Patients prefer early treatment with a fractional CO(2) ablative laser for postoperative surgical scars. The use of a CO(2) fractional laser is safe and effective also causes high patients satisfaction.
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spelling pubmed-60622932018-08-07 Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser Mossaad, Aida Kotb, Amr Abdelrahaman, Moustapha Ahmady, Hatem Al Open Access Maced J Med Sci Clinical Science BACKGROUND: Postoperative scarring is a common cause of patients dissatisfaction. Several modalities have been developed to overcome such a problem following surgical repair. Despite precise surgical technique, still, some scars would remain over the time, mostly due to the weak formation or inadequately replaced collagen fibres in the underneath dermis especially those following unilateral or bilateral cleft lip repair surgery. AIM: of this study is to evaluate whether a 10,600 nm fractional ablative carbon dioxide (CO(2)) used early during the healing period would result in better postoperative scars. METHODS: In the present study six patients complained from cleft lip scars resulting from lip revision surgery. Each patient had six fractional ablative CO(2) laser sessions for treatment along six months to obtain a complete collagen cycle. Vancouver Scar Scale VSS was used as a method of evaluation of the scar using 4 points scale evaluating vascularity, pliability, thickness & colour of the skin and Visual Analogue Scale VAS from (0-10) was used to assess the severity of pain as well as a survey questionnaire for the rate of patient’s satisfaction. Also, digital clinical photos assessment before&after were compared. RESULTS: Patients expressed a significantly greater degree of satisfaction with the treatment using a subjective 4-point scale. All patients observed dramatic improvement in their lip scars after FCO(2) laser sessions following their surgeries with the better psychological state. The assessment was done by clinical observation according to VSS before (9.17 ± 2.2) while after (3.33 ± 1.9) with a highly significant P value <0.001 and VAS for the rate of pain & satisfaction that ranged from (8.0 ± 0.9) as well as series of photos taken before and after the procedure. No long-term complications were noted however patients complained of annoying pain during the session as well as crust formation that lasted up to 5 days after surgery. In the present study, we introduce the effectiveness of ablative fractional 10,600 nm CO(2) laser for treatment of postoperative cleft lip scar after secondary surgical cleft repair rather than ablative CO(2) due to its reported complications such as postoperative infection, erythema and pigmentary changes along with prolonged downtime healing. In the current study, we chose early laser treatment within the first six months before complete collagen organisation which will be easier to manage the older scars. Patients mostly complained about the pain during the session as well as dark-coloured crust formation post session that stayed from 3-5 days however they all observed a massive improvement of their scars following treatment protocol. CONCLUSION: Facial wounds sutured in layers heal in a good manner. Patients prefer early treatment with a fractional CO(2) ablative laser for postoperative surgical scars. The use of a CO(2) fractional laser is safe and effective also causes high patients satisfaction. Republic of Macedonia 2018-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6062293/ /pubmed/30087726 http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2018.250 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Aida Mossaad, Amr Kotb, Moustapha Abdelrahaman, Hatem Al Ahmady http://creativecommons.org/licenses/CC BY-NC/4.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Clinical Science
Mossaad, Aida
Kotb, Amr
Abdelrahaman, Moustapha
Ahmady, Hatem Al
Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title_full Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title_fullStr Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title_full_unstemmed Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title_short Post-Surgical Repair of Cleft Scar Using Fractional CO(2) Laser
title_sort post-surgical repair of cleft scar using fractional co(2) laser
topic Clinical Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6062293/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30087726
http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2018.250
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