Laser Surgery
Gale Encyclopedia of Surgery: A Guide for Patients and Caregivers
Laser surgery
Definition
The term laser means light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation, and it uses a laser light source (laser beam) to remove tissues that are diseased or to treat blood vessels that are bleeding. Laser beams are strong beams of light produced by electrically stimulating a particular material. A solid, a liquid, or a gas is used. Alternatively, the laser is used cosmetically; it can remove wrinkles, birthmarks, or tattoos.
The special light beam is focused to treat tissues by heating the cells until they burst. There are a number of different laser types. Each has a different use and color. The color, or the light beam, relates to the type of surgery that is being performed and the color of the tissue that is being treated. There are three types of laser: the carbon dioxide (CO2) laser; the YAG laser (yttrium aluminum garnet); and the pulsed dye laser.
Purpose
Laser surgery is used to:
- cut or destroy tissue that is abnormal or diseased without harming healthy, normal tissue
- shrink or destroy tumors and lesions
- close off nerve endings to reduce postoperative pain
- cauterize (seal) blood vessels to reduce blood loss
- seal lymph vessels to minimize swelling and decrease spread of tumor cells
- remove moles, warts, and tattoos
- decrease the appearance of skin wrinkles
Precautions
Anyone who is thinking about having laser surgery should ask the surgeon to:
- explain why laser surgery is likely to be of greater benefit than traditional surgery
- describe the surgeon's experience in performing the laser procedure the patient is considering
Because some lasers can temporarily or permanently discolor the skin of blacks, Asians, and Hispanics, a dark-skinned patient should make sure that the surgeon has successfully performed laser procedures on people of color. Potential problems include infection, pain, scarring, and changes in skin color.
Some types of laser surgery should not be performed on pregnant women or on patients with severe cardiopulmonary disease or other serious health problems.
Additionally, because some laser surgical procedures are performed under general anesthesia, its risks should be fully discussed with the anesthesiologist. The patient should fully disclose all over-the-counter and prescription medications that are being taken, as well as the foods and beverages that are generally consumed; some can interact with agents used in anesthesia.
Description
Lasers can be used to perform almost any surgical procedure. In fact, general surgeons employ the various laser wavelengths and laser delivery systems to cut, coagulate, vaporize, and remove tissue. In most "laser surgeries," they actually use genuine laser devices in place of conventional surgical tools—scalpels, cryosugery probes, electrosurgical units, or microwave devices—to carry out standard procedures, like mastectomy (breast surgery). With the use of lasers, the skilled and trained surgeon can accomplish tasks that are more complex, all the while reducing blood loss, decreasing postoperative patient discomfort, decreasing the chances of infection to the wound, reducing the spread of some cancers, minimizing the extent of surgery (in some cases), and achieving better outcomes in wound healing. Also, because lasers are more precise, the laser can penetrate tissue by adjusting the intensity of the light.
Lasers are also extremely useful in both open and laparoscopic procedures. Common surgical uses include breast surgery, removal of the gallbladder, hernia repair, bowel resection , hemorrhoidectomy , solid organ surgery, and treatment of pilonidal cyst.
The first working laser was introduced in 1960. Initially used to treat diseases and disorders of the eye, the device was first used to treat diseases and disorders of the eye, whose transparent tissues gave ophthalmic surgeons a clear view of how the narrow, concentrated beam was being directed. Dermatologic surgeons also helped to pioneer laser surgery, and developed and improved upon many early techniques and more refined surgical procedures.
Types of lasers
The three types of lasers most often used in medical treatment are the:
- Carbon dioxide (CO2) laser. Primarily a surgical tool, this device converts light energy to heat strong enough to minimize bleeding, while cutting through or vaporizes tissue.
- Neodymium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Nd:YAG) laser. Capable of penetrating tissue more deeply than other lasers, the Nd:YAG laser enables blood to clot quickly, allowing surgeons to see and can enable surgeons to see and touch body parts that could otherwise be reached only through open (invasive) surgery.
- Argon laser. This laser provides the limited penetration needed for eye surgery and superficial skin disorders. In a special procedure known as photodynamic therapy (PDT), this laser uses light-sensitive dyes to shrink or dissolve tumors.
Laser applications
Sometimes described as "scalpels of light," lasers are used alone or with conventional surgical instruments in a array of procedures that:
- improve appearance
- relieve pain
- restore function
- save lives
Laser surgery is often standard operating procedure for specialists in:
- cardiology (branch of medicine which deals with the heart and its diseases)
- dentistry (branch of medicine which deals with the anatomy and development and diseases of the teeth)
- dermatology (science which treats the skin, its structure, functions, and its diseases)
- gastroenterology (science which treats disorders of the stomach and intestines)
- gynecology (science which treats of the structure and diseases of women)
- neurosurgery (surgery of the nervous system)
- oncology (cancer treatment)
- ophthalmology (treatment of disorders of the eye)
- orthopedics (treatment of disorders of bones, joints, muscles, ligaments, and tendons)
- otolaryngology (treatment of disorders of the ears, nose, and throat)
- pulmonology (treatment of disorders of the respiratory system)
- urology (treatment of disorders of the urinary tract and of the male reproductive system)
Routine uses of lasers, include eliminating birth-marks, skin discoloration, and skin changes due to aging, and removing benign, precancerous, or cancerous tissues or tumors. Lasers are used to stop a patient's snoring, remove tonsils, remove or transplant hair, and relieve pain and restore function in patients who are too weak to undergo major surgery. Lasers are also used to treat:
- angina (chest pain)
- cancerous or noncancerous tumors that cannot be removed or destroyed
- cold and canker sores, gum disease, and tooth sensitivity or decay
- ectopic pregnancy (development of a fertilized egg outside the uterus)
- endometriosis
- fibroid tumors
- gallstones
- glaucoma, mild-to-moderate nearsightedness and astigmatism, and other conditions that impair sight
- migraine headaches
- noncancerous enlargement of the prostate gland
- nosebleeds
- ovarian cysts
- ulcers
- varicose veins
- warts
- numerous other conditions, diseases, and disorders
Advantages of laser surgery
Often referred to as "bloodless surgery," laser procedures usually involve less bleeding than conventional surgery. The heat generated by the laser keeps the surgical site free of germs and reduces the risk of infection. Because a smaller incision is required, laser procedures often take less time (and cost less money) than traditional surgery. Sealing off blood vessels and nerves reduces bleeding, swelling, scarring, pain, and the length of the recovery period.
Disadvantages of laser surgery
Although many laser surgeries can be performed in a doctor's office, rather than in a hospital, the person guiding the laser must be at least as thoroughly trained and highly skilled as someone performing the same procedure in a hospital setting. The American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery urges that:
- All operative areas be equipped with oxygen and other drugs and equipment required for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
- Non-physicians performing laser procedures be properly trained, licensed, and insured.
- A qualified and experienced supervising physician be able to respond to and manage unanticipated events or other emergencies within five minutes of the time they occur.
- Emergency transportation to a hospital or other acute care facility (ACF) be available whenever laser surgery is performed in a non-hospital setting.
Diagnosis/Preparation
Because laser surgery is used to treat so many diverse conditions, the patient should ask the physician for detailed instructions about how to prepare for a specific procedure. Diet, activities, and medications may not have to be limited prior to surgery, but some procedures require a physical examination , a medical history, and conversation with the patient that:
- enables the doctor to evaluate the patient's general health and current medical status
- provides the doctor with information about how the patient has responded to other illnesses, hospital stays, and diagnostic or therapeutic procedures
- clarifies what the patient expects the outcome of the procedure to be
Aftercare
Most laser surgeries can be performed on an outpatient basis, and patients are usually permitted to leave the hospital or medical office when their vital signs have stabilized. A patient who has been sedated should not be discharged until recovery from the anesthesia is complete, unless a responsible adult is available to accompany the patient home.
The doctor may prescribe analgesic (pain-relieving) medication, and should provide easy-to-understand, written instructions on how to take the medication. The doctor should also be able to give the patient a good estimate of how the patient's recovery should progress, the recovery time, and what to do in case complications or emergency arise. The amount of time it takes for the patient to recover from surgery depends on the surgery and on the individual. Recovery time for laser surgery is, for the most part, faster than for traditional surgery.
Risks
Like traditional surgery, laser surgery can be complicated by:
- hemorrhage
- infection
- perforation (piercing) of an organ or tissue
Laser surgery can also involve risks that are not associated with traditional surgical procedures. Being careless or not practicing safe surgical techniques can severely burn the patient's lungs or even cause them to explode. Patients must wear protective eye shields while undergoing laser surgery on any part of the face near the eyes or eyelids, and the United States Food and Drug Administration has said that both doctors and patients must use special wavelength-specific, protective eyewear whenever a CO2 laser is used.
There are other kinds of dangers that laser surgery can impose of which the patient should be aware. Laser beams have the capacity to do a great deal of damage when coupled with high enough energy and absorption. They can ignite clothing, paper, and hair. Further, the risk of fire from lasers increases in the presence of oxygen. Hair should be protected and clothing should be tied back, or removed, within the treatment areas. It is important to guard against electric shock, as lasers require the use of high voltage. Critically, installation must ensure proper wiring.
Laser beams can burn or destroy healthy tissue, cause injuries that are painful and sometimes permanent, and actually compound problems they are supposed to solve. Errors or inaccuracies in laser surgery can worsen a patient's vision, for example, and lasers can scar and even change the skin color of some patients.
All of the above risks, precautions, and potential complications should be discussed by the doctor with the patient.
Normal results
The nature and severity of the problem, the skill of the surgeon performing the procedure, and the patient's general health and realistic expectations are among the factors that influence the outcome of laser surgery. Successful procedures can enable patients to feel better, look younger, and enjoy longer, fuller, more active lives.
A patient who is considering any kind of laser surgery should ask the doctor to provide detailed information about what the outcome of the surgery is expected to be, what the recovery process will involve, and how long it will probably be before a normal appearance is regained and the patient can resume normal activities.
A person who is considering any type of laser surgery should ask the doctor to provide specific and detailed information about what could go wrong during the procedure and what the negative impact on the patient's health or appearance might be.
Lighter or darker skin may appear, for example, when a laser is used to remove sun damage or age spots from an olive- or dark-skinned individual. This abnormal pigmentation may or may not disappear over time.
Scarring or rupturing of the cornea is uncommon, but laser surgery on one or both eyes can:
- increase sensitivity to light or glare
- reduce night vision
- permanently cloud vision, or cause sharpness of vision to decline throughout the day
Signs of infection following laser surgery include:
- burning
- crusting of the skin
- itching
- pain
- scarring
- severe redness
- swelling
Resources
books
Carlson, Karen J., et. al. The Harvard Guide to Women's Health. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.
periodicals
"Laser Procedures for Nearsightedness." FDA Consumer (Jan./Feb. 1996): 2.
"Laser Resurfacing Slows the Hands of Time." Harvard Health Letter (Aug. 1996): 4-5.
"Lasers." Mayo Clinic Health Letter (July 1994): 1-3.
"Lasers: Bright Lights of the Medical World." Cosmopolitan (May 1995): 262-265.
"Lasers for Skin Surgery." Harvard Women's Health Watch (Mar. 1997): 2-3.
"Lasers–Hope or Hype?" American Health (June 1994): 68-72, 103.
"New Cancer Therapies That Ease Pain, Extend Life." Cancer Smart (June 1997): 8-10.
"New Laser Surgery for Angina." HealthNews (6 May 1997): 3-4.
"Saving Face." Essence (Aug. 1997), 24, 26, 28.
organizations
American Society for Dermatologic Surgery. 930 N. Meacham Road, P.O. Box 4014, Schaumburg, IL 60168-4014. (847) 330-9830. <http://www.asds-net.org>.
American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. 2404 Stewart Square, Wausau, WI 54401.(715) 845-9283. <http://www.aslms.org>.
Cancer Information Service. 9000 Rockville Pike, Building 31, Suite 10A18, Bethesda, MD 20892. 1-800-4-CANCER. <http://wwwicic.nci.nih.gov>.
Mayo Clinic. Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery. 200 First Street. SW, Rochester, MN 55905. (507) 284-2511. <http://www.mayoclinic.org/colorectalsurgery-rst/laparoscopicsurgery.html>.
Mayo Clinic. Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research, 200 First Street. SW, Rochester, MN 55905. (507) 284-2511. <http://http://www.mayoclinic.com>.
National Cancer Institute. Building 31, Room 10A31, 31 Center Drive, MSC 2580, Bethesda, MD 20892-2580. (800) 422-6237. <http://www.nci.nih.gov>.
other
"Complications of Dermatologic Laser Surgery." 2 Nov. 2001 <http://www.emedicine.com/derm/topic525.htm>.
"Facts About Laser Surgery." Glaucoma Research Foundation Page. 12 Mar. 1998 <http://www.glaucoma.org/fs-lasersur.html>.
Haggerty, Maureen. "ASLMS Guidelines for Office-Based Laser Procedures." A Healthy Me Page. 19 Mar. 1998 <http://www.ahealthyme.com/topic/topic100587070>.
"Refractive Eye Surgery." Mayo Clinic Online. 15 Mar. 1998 <http://www.mayohealth.org/mayo/9707/htm/refract.htm>.
"What is Laser?" The American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Page. 19 Mar. 1998 <http://www.asds-net.org>.
Laith Farid Gulli, M.D., M.S.
Randi B. Jenkins, B.A.
Bilal Nasser, M.D., M.S.
Robert Ramirez, B.S.
Find more facts and information related to the .
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
Symposium on laser surgery--The basics of soft tissue laser surgery
; ...soft tissue laser surgery As surgical lasers become more...fundamentals of laser surgery, which has many...rapidly accepting lasers as a surgical...the effects of laser surgery. The next article...techniques for using lasers in common surgeries...
Read more
|
|
Laser surgery battle has national implications
; ...in a bid to thwart the laser surgery bill for financial reasons...not qualified to perform laser surgery on the eye. Mathews held that lasers are surgical instruments...proficient thereby to perform laser surgery," the judge said. He said...health and welfare that laser ...
Read more
|
|
Laser Surgery Gives Contacts New Competition
; New laser surgery to correct vision disorders...each year will turn to laser surgery to correct vision problems...Baltimore. But Stark said that laser surgery should not be viewed as...treatment with two different lasers - the excimer and YAG...specialists agreed that ...
Read more
|
|
Area vet uses lasers to cut animals' pain; Replacing scalpel: Laser surgery helps minimize the loss of blood for animals
; ...This spring, Hathaway bought laser- surgery equipment to enhance his practice...about 12 dogs to Hathaway for laser surgery. The track's dogs are spayed...before they're adopted. The laser surgery has been wonderful for the...
Read more
|
|
LASER SURGERY BENEFITS PETS; A LOCAL VETERINARIAN SAYS IT CAUSES LESS PAIN BUT COSTS MORE.(BUSINESS)
; ...many years, physicians have used lasers to operate on patients. Now what...country have traded their scalpels for lasers for certain types of animal surgeries...that sold Andress a carbon dioxide laser this summer, said so far Andress...veterinarian in Greensboro offering laser surgery for ...
Read more
|
|
Perseverance, planning are keys to laser surgery practice success
; ...uncertain - and sometimes humble - beginnings. Laser surgery dream "It was 1990 when I started out, and...Sometimes I even felt like giving up my laser surgery dream." She didn't, of course. Here's what...could do to get my name and my message about laser surgery out there," Dr. ...
Read more
|
|
OPTOMETRISTS LOBBY FOR LASER SURGERY\OPHTHALMOLOGISTS SAY ONLY PHYSICIANS SHOULD PERFORM NEW PROCEDURE.(LOCAL)
; ...would allow them to perform delicate laser surgery on eyes - a prospect some doctors believe...would be allowed to perform a new laser surgery known as photorefractive keratectomy...allow optometrists to perform the new laser surgery, which corrects nearsightedness, as...
Read more
|
|
Laser surgery for a pet? You bet
; ...There is now a way to make it easier, through laser surgery. Laser surgery for animals, as for people, is a much less invasive...two weeks, and sit with their feet up. With laser surgery, when they wake up they don't feel pain. You...
Read more
|
|
Laser surgery approved to treat farsightedness
; ...government on Tuesday approved the first laser surgery system to treat farsightedness, the...This opens up a whole new market." Laser surgery has been used since 1995 to correct...equipment to doctors to perform the laser surgery. The FDA on Tuesday also approved a...
Read more
|
|
Laser surgery request dropped
; ...optometrists to perform laser surgery. "Right now, it...training to use lasers to correct vision...that they can use lasers, hurt themselves...for performing laser surgery. That decision...authority to use lasers, however. If optometrists...common type of laser ...
Read more
|
For more facts and information,
see all related premium articles
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
laser surgery
laser surgery Surgery carried out using a laser . The high energy in an narrow laser beam can burn through body tissues to make a fine ‘cut’. The heat also seals blood vessels, so there is less bleeding than when a knife is used. Less...
Read more
|
|
Laser In-Situ Keratomileusis (LASIK)
...surgeon uses an excimer laser to cut or reshape...LASIK is an elective surgery for patients who...to stabilize, and surgery centers and physicians...to use an excimer laser to attempt to correct...program into the laser is correct. Three...administered twice before surgery. The first ...
Read more
|
|
Laser Posterior Capsulotomy
...years after cataract surgery. Elschnig's pearls...previously performed laser capsulotomy. A secondary...eventually undergo a laser capsulotomy, although...undergone cataract surgery. The average time...eye during cataract surgery. Also, the incidence...PCO formation and laser ...
Read more
|
|
Laser Skin Resurfacing
Laser skin resurfacing Definition Laser skin resurfacing involves the application of laser light to the skin in order to remove fine wrinkles and...often used on the skin of the face. Purpose The purpose of laser skin resurfacing is to use the heat generated by extremely...younger appearance. ...
Read more
|
|
laser
laser ( lay -zer) n. a device that produces a very thin beam of light in which high energies are concentrated. In surgery, lasers can be used to operate on small areas of abnormality...delicate surrounding tissue. For example, they are used in eye surgery for cutting tissue (YAG l.), for photocoagulation of ...
Read more
|