Photothermolysis with 1550 nm Fractional Laser Promotes Regeneration of Gingival Mucosa
Elena Morozova, Alexey Fayzullin, Polad Osmanov, Anna Timakova, Peter Timashev, Svetlana Tarasenko

TL;DR
A 1550 nm fractional laser promotes regeneration of oral tissue in rabbits without causing scarring.
Contribution
This is the first controlled study evaluating a 1550 nm laser for oral mucosa regeneration.
Findings
Fractional laser treatment at 100–130 kJ promotes tissue remodeling without scarring.
Complete epithelial recovery occurs within two weeks, allowing repeated treatments.
Higher energy levels induce fibroblast proliferation and neoangiogenesis.
Abstract
Fractional laser photothermolysis, long established in dermatology, enables controlled microthermal injury that stimulates repair without scarring, but its potential in oral tissue regeneration has not been systematically explored. In this study, we conducted the first controlled experimental evaluation of a 1550 nm erbium fiber laser for oral mucosa regeneration. Thirty-two rabbits underwent fractional photothermolysis at energy levels of 70, 100 and 130 kJ, with gingival biopsies collected at 1, 14, 28 and 42 days for histological and immunohistochemical assessment of epithelial repair, stromal remodeling, inflammation and angiogenesis. All energy modes produced microcoagulation columns followed by progressive epithelial thickening, fibroblast proliferation and neoangiogenesis. The 70 kJ mode occasionally led to residual fibrosis, whereas higher energies (100–130 kJ) promoted…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser Applications in Dentistry and Medicine · Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments · Dermatologic Treatments and Research
