HIGH-POWER ARGON-LASER TREATMENT VIA STANDARD ENDOSCOPES .1. PRELIMINARY-STUDY OF EFFICACY IN CONTROL OF EXPERIMENTAL EROSIVE BLEEDING

  • 1 January 1976
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 71 (4), 558-563
Abstract
With minimal transmission loss a high power argon laser (10 W) was coupled to a waveguide consisting of a flexible, single, coated, quartz fiber encased in a protective polyethylene tube. This waveguide can be passed down the biopsy channel of any standard fiberoptic endoscope. An aiming light improves accuracy. Safety devices were developed to protect the subject and the operator. Each of 8 heparinized mongrel dogs had 3 superficial erosions created endoscopically in the fundal gland mucosa by a jet of warm 0.1 N HCl. In each animal 2 lesions were photocoagulated with the laser, and the third was left as a control. The animals were killed at 0, 4, 7, 10 and 14 days, and the erosions were examined histologically. By 14 days all lesions were covered by normal surface epithelium. Parietal and chief cells had returned to untreated erosions at 14 days but not to all lasered lesions. Only rarely did the lasered lesions penetrate through the muscularis mucosae into the submucosa. High power argon laser photocoagulation is now feasible through standard endoscopes. These data are sufficiently promising to encourage further evaluation of laser photocoagulation in a variety of animal models.

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