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Assessment of Fractional CO2 Laser in Treatment of Post-surgical Scarring of Cleft Lip

A

Assiut University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cleft Lip Post-surgical Scar

Treatments

Radiation: Fractional CO2 laser

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03277287
CO2 laser in cleft lip scar

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a prospective comparative study on 120 patients divided to three groups. Group A: 40 patients laser will be applied 3 weeks post-surgical. Group B: 40 patients laser will be applied 3 months post surgical. Group C: 40 patients as a control not treated with laser from 2017 to 2020 which will be conducted on patients with post-surgical cleft lip repair scaring.

All patients will have 5-7 sessions with 4 weeks interval.

Photographic documentation and evaluation of the scar will occur every 4 weeks.

Full description

The carbon dioxide laser (CO2 Laser) was one of the earliest gas lasers to be developed. It was invented by Kumar Patel of Bell Labs in 1964.

CO2 laser is the highest power continuous wave lasers that are currently available which produces a beam of infrared light with the principal wavelength bands centering on 9.4 and 10.6 micrometers. Patel, C. K. N. (1964).

When CO2 beam of light is selectively applied to the skin, it heats and vaporizes various layers of skin, instantly treating damaged skin and wrinkles while smoothing out the surface of the skin.

The skin remodeling occurs with new skin and collagen growth. The healing typically involves an open surface which takes weeks to heal and typically results in loss of the baseline pigmentation leading to variable lightening of skin. Dover, J. S. (2012) Fractional CO2 laser resurfacing is a revolutionary delivery system that provides dramatic skin improvement without surgery. Matrix combines the benefits of CO2 laser by using micro laser columns "points of light" to treat the epidermis and dermal layers of your skin.

Bernstein et al, (1997) Cleft lip is a form of lip malformation that occurs very early in pregnancy, the incidence of cleft lip in the population is approximately 0.5-2 in 1000 live births. Male children are affected more often than female children.

Michalski AM et al, (2015). Because each cleft is unique, definitive repair of the cleft lip should be individualized as Mirault, Le Mesurier, Tennison, and Millard.

Stal S et al, (2009)

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Any age with acceptable scar which would not need further revision.
  • Group A: three weeks after repair & group B: three months after repair with no hypertrophy, erythema or any other scar complication.

Exclusion criteria

  • Any case with deformity needing further surgical interference.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

120 participants in 3 patient groups

Group A
Experimental group
Description:
Fractional CO2 laser will be applied on cleft lip scar 3 weeks post-surgical
Treatment:
Radiation: Fractional CO2 laser
Group B
Experimental group
Description:
Fractional CO2 laser will be applied on cleft lip scar 3 months post-surgical
Treatment:
Radiation: Fractional CO2 laser
Group C
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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