This study examined the safety and dose-response relationships of 632-nm laser irradiation of photosensitized normal coronary arteries in 27 dogs. Fifteen received 2.5 mg/kg dihematoporphyrin ether (DHE), seven received no sensitizer, and five had coronary instrumentation but no laser (sham laser procedures) at nine coronary sites--four sensitized, five non-sensitized. Laser energy of 82 to 1,640 J/cm2 was delivered via a 584 microns diffusing-tip optical fiber, providing estimated tissue fluences of 20 to 410 J/cm2. Serial electrocardiograms and selective coronary arteriograms were performed up to 1 month post laser irradiation. Histologic examination was performed of all treated sites. Tissue fluences less than 200 J/cm2 produced no permanent electrocardiographic or angiographic changes; reversible spasm occurred in 2/8 photosensitized-lased, 0/2 non-photosensitized-lased. Minor medial damage occurred in 1/8 sensitized-lased, 1/2 non-sensitized-lased, and 0/9 sham-lased sites. At tissue fluences greater than 200 J/cm2 4/7 sensitized-lased animals died prematurely--one due to immediate and irreversible coronary spasm and Q wave infarction, one due to fibrillation during 48-hour follow-up coronary angiography (normal angiograms), two with normal electrocardiograms and angiograms within one day of undetermined death; 0/5 non-sensitized-lased animals expired or had coronary spasm; and 3/7 sensitized-lased and 0/5 non-sensitized/lased had significant medial to adventitial histologic damage. Coronary irradiation at less than 200 J/cm2 appears to be safe for photodynamic treatment of atherosclerotic lesions. Pretreatment for coronary spasm is appropriate.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.