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Laser
Skilled
surgeons use laser light with pinpoint
accuracy. The unwanted hemorrhoid is simply vaporized or excised.
The infinitely small laser beam allows
for unequaled precision and accuracy, and usually rapid, unimpaired
healing.
The
result is less discomfort, less medication, and faster healing.
A hospital stay is generally not required. The laser
is inherently therapeutic, sealing off nerves and tiny blood vessels
with an invisible light. By sealing superficial nerve endings
patients have a minimum of postoperative discomfort. With the
closing of tiny blood vessels, your proctologist is able to operate
in a controlled and bloodless environment.
Procedures
can often be completed more quickly and with less difficulty for
both patient and physician.
In
a documented study of 750 patients undergoing laser
treatment for hemorrhoids, 98% successful results were reported.
The patient satisfaction was 99%.
Published Laser Research
Dis
Colon Rectum 1995 Dec;38(12):1265-9 Related Articles
Ambulatory
hemorrhoidectomy with CO2 laser.
Hodgson
WJ, Morgan J.
Section
of Gastro-Intestinal and Colo-Rectal Surgery, Westchester Medical
Center, Valhalla, New York, USA.
PURPOSE:
This study was undertaken to evaluate ambulatory hemorrhoidectomy
using the CO2 laser. METHODS: Ninety consecutive patients (50
males, 40 females), 80 percent of whom had second or third degree
hemorrhoids, had ambulatory hemorrhoidectomy performed with a
CO2 laser in the left lateral Sims position under local anesthesia
and intravenous sedation. Dissection was entirely performed with
the CO2 laser using an open technique. RESULTS: One patient with
polycythemia vera was admitted subsequently for secondary hemorrhage.
All but three patients had healed within four weeks. No long-term
sequelae were encountered. CONCLUSION: These results compare favorably
with those obtained by others and show that ambulatory laser
hemorrhoidectomy may simplify management in selected patients.
J
Chir (Paris) 1990 Apr;127(4):227-9
[Outpatient
hemorrhoidectomy using the CO2 laser]
Masson
JL.
In
the free standing center of ambulatory surgery of Nice, proctology
with carbon dioxide laser is a basic activity. Among 177 cases
of proctology operated during 1989, we find 91 hemorrhoidectomies
realized with CO2 laser in strictly ambulatory surgery (no hospitalization).
This work's interet is demonstrating adaptation to the laser makes
many advantages to the classic operation of Milligan and Morgan:
simplification of the surgical technique easy post-operative
course, no hospitalization and quicker return to work,
leading to a lower cost of this pathology. Complications
are rare and excellent results noted.
Dis
Colon Rectum 1991 Jan;34(1):78-82
The
role of lasers in hemorrhoidectomy.
Wang
JY, Chang-Chien CR, Chen JS, Lai CR, Tang RP
Department
of Surgery, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Taipei, Taiwan.
Abstract:
Laser hemorrhoidectomy patients had less pain, less constipation,
less urinary retention, and spent less time in the hospital than
traditional hemorrhoidectomy patients.
Eighty-eight
patients who received treatment for hemorrhoids were randomized
into two groups. Group A received the Nd-YAG laser phototherapy
for internal hemorrhoid combined with the CO2 laser for external
hemorrhoid. Group B was treated with closed Ferguson hemorrhoidectomy.
The need of narcotic injections for pain relief was 11 percent
in group A vs. 56 percent in group B (P less than 0.001). The
incidence of postoperative urinary retention was 7 percent in
group A, vs. 39 percent in group B (P less than 0.05). No enema
was required postoperatively in group A, vs. 9 percent in group
B; 84 percent of the patients in group A were discharged on the
second postoperative day, vs. 83 percent of the patients in group
B discharged on the fifth postoperative day. The cost was 20 percent
less in the former group.
Jpn
J Surg 1989 Nov;19(6):658-61
The
laser treatment of hemorrhoids: results of a study on 1816 patients.
Iwagaki
H, Higuchi Y, Fuchimoto S, Orita K
Higuchi
General Hospital, Okayama, Japan.
Laser
is an effective, simple and harmless clinical procedure used for
the treatment of hemorrhoids, as an alternative to medical therapy
or surgery. In this report, we describe our experience of applying
carbon dioxide laser to hemorrhoids in a total 1816 consecutive
patients. The results lead us to conclude that the laser treatment
of hemorrhoids is effective in pain alleviation from the first
session and that patients so treated have a much more comfortable
postoperative course.
Vestn
Khir Im I I Grek 1989 Sep;143(9):3-5
[Carbon
dioxide laser in the surgical treatment of proctologic diseases]
Skobelkin
OK, Tolstykh PI, Derbenev VA, Ste'nko VG, Kochurkov NV.
Results
of the surgical treatment of 556 patients with different
diseases of the anorectal area with the help of CO2 laser are
presented. Functional results were good, the amount of postoperative
complications was 1.5 times less, recurrences were half less,
the time of intrahospital treatment was 1.5 day shorter, the period
of ambulatory rehabilitation 3.8 days shorter.
Int
J Colorectal Dis 1995;10(1):22-4
CO2
laser haemorrhoidectomy--does it alter anorectal function or decrease
pain compared to conventional haemorrhoidectomy?
Chia
YW, Darzi A, Speakman CT, Hill AD, Jameson JS, Henry MM
Department
of Surgery, Central Middlesex Hospital, London, UK.
Carbon
dioxide (CO2) laser haemorrhoidectomy is feasible and safe provided
it is used with care. It is associated with a reduced requirement
for post-operative analgesia. The CO2 laser caused no significant
alteration in anorectal physiology.
http://www.slti.com/hemorrhoid.html,
1998-99
Dr.
Gerald Kirshenbaum, Aurora, CO and Dr. Allen Snyder, Pittsburgh,
PA
It
is a simple, rapid, and remarkably effective procedure. These
doctors report that the procedure is significantly shorter
with the Contact Laser technique, taking approximately 20 minutes
for one large hemorrhoid and about 45 minutes for three. Following
cold knife, electrocautery, or non-contact laser hemorrhoidectomy,
patients typically remain in the hospital for 3-5 days and leave
in considerable discomfort. Following Contact Laser hemorrhoidectomy,
the typical patient will return home the same day, by 3 or
4 days they are moving their bowels without undue pain or difficulty,
and they can return to their normal routine by 7-10 days post-operatively.
Both
physicians find a marked difference in pain compared to traditional
techniques. Though it is not clear which aspects of the procedure
are responsible for this reduction in post-surgical symptoms,
the total procedure using this technique appears to have a positive
impact on the patient's recovery. There is less tissue damage
and muscle stimulation than with other methods, the laser seals
lymphatics so that there is markedly less edema, and there
is some belief that the laser energy may also seal nerve endings.
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