Novel Device for Tissue Cooling During Endoscopic Laryngeal Laser Surgery: Thermal Damage Study in an Ex Vivo Calf Model

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Objectives: Minimizing collateral thermal damage during endoscopic laryngeal laser surgery remains a priority, and tissue cooling is one way to achieve this goal. Cooling systems utilizing compressed air have been shown to reduce the extent of thermal trauma on the vocal folds, but these units are not ideal for endoscopic applications because cooling is inefficient at the low airflows needed. We examined whether a novel vortex cooling device that generates cooled air at low flow rates would provide a cooling benefit beyond that which could be obtained by using room-temperature air for cooling tissue or by using no cooling during simulated laryngeal laser surgery. Methods: A continuous-wave thulium laser was used to incise glottic tissue in 12 calf vocal folds. Cooling was achieved with a prototype vortex cooler (9 degrees C air output; flow rate, 3 L/min), and tissue temperature measurements were compared to those with room-air cooling and no cooling. Thermal damage was analyzed histologically by measuring the depth of lactate dehydrogenase inactivation surrounding the mucosal incision. The cooling conditions were tested during time-constant cuts (8 seconds) and depth-constant cuts (into the thyroarytenoid muscle). Results: During time-constant cuts, comparison between vortex cooling and room-air cooling revealed that vortex cooling resulted in a thermal damage zone that was 14% smaller (519 versus 603 mu m; p < 0.05). During depth-constant cuts, vortex cooling created a thermal damage zone that was 32% smaller than that created with no cooling (p < 0.01) and 9% smaller than that created with room-air cooling (p < 0.01). Conclusions: Vortex cooling reduces thermal damage more effectively than room-air cooling or no cooling during both time-constant and depth-constant thulium laser cuts.
Publisher
ANNALS PUBL CO
Issue Date
2012-07
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

CO2-LASER SURGERY; THULIUM LASER; COMPLICATIONS; TEMPERATURE; LESIONS; AIR

Citation

ANNALS OF OTOLOGY RHINOLOGY AND LARYNGOLOGY, v.121, no.7, pp.485 - 489

ISSN
0003-4894
DOI
10.1177/000348941212100710
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/174478
Appears in Collection
RIMS Journal Papers
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