Skin thermal recovery following cryotherapy: a comparison of liquid nitrogen and liquid nitrous oxide.

Clin Exp Dermatol, 2023/10/25;48(11):1255-1257.

Erdmann SAB[1], Wokes J[2]

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PMID: 37403205DOI: 10.1093/ced/llad224

Impact factor: 4.481

Abstract
Cryotherapy is a common technique used in the management of superficial skin lesions, with current advice on the correct timing for freeze-thaw cycles based on nonscientific visual skin appearances. We investigated the effect of cryotherapy on thermal thawing times by creating a porcine skin model in a laboratory setting maintained at normal skin temperature and comparing liquid nitrogen and liquid nitrous oxide. Thermal assessment was performed using a thermal camera attached to an iPhone 11Pro® smartphone. Liquid nitrogen reduced skin temperature to -60 °C after 5 s of application, recovering to 0 °C after 70 s. Liquid nitrous oxide reduced skin temperature to -34.8 °C after 5 s but had a faster recovery to 0 °C after only 20 s. Both cryogens required a thawing period of 5 min to recover to normal skin temperature. We therefore suggest that optimum cellular degradation should allow for 5-min freeze-thaw cryotherapy cycles; a slower thawing period than is in current common practice.
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