Iontophoresis for Anesthesia During Pulsed Dye Laser Treatment of Port‐Wine Stains

1997 
: Port-wine stains (PWS) are benign, congenital vascular malformations found in approximately 0.3% of newborns. PWS may be effectively treated with the flashlamp pulsed dye laser (FPDL) at 585 nm. However, laser therapy of vascular lesions often produces pain. We performed a prospective double-blind, placebo-controlled evaluation of the iontophoresis of lidocaine 5% with epinephrine 1:50,000 and mepivacaine 2% with epinephrine 1:50,000. Thirty-six patients with facial PWS were included in the study; 13 of them were treated with lidocaine 5% with epinephrine, another 13 were treated with mepivacaine 2% with epinephrine, and the other 13 were treated with preservative-free 0.9% NaCI. The pain was graded by the patient on a visual analog scale from 0 to 10, comparing the lontophoretically treated area with an adjacent area treated without anesthesia. Pain evaluation by patients demonstrated a significant decrease in the pain of pulsed dye laser impulses using the iontophoresis of lidocaine 5% with epinephrine. No change in the efficacy of pulsed dye laser treatment of PWS or important side effects were observed in our patients, lontophoresis of lidocaine 5% with epinephrine is a safe and effective method of local anesthesia for pulsed dye laser and it is more effective than the iontophoresis of mepivacaine 2% with epinephrine.
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