Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine...

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Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC [email protected]

Transcript of Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine...

Page 1: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery

Adam O. Goldstein, MD

Associate Professor

UNC Dept Family Medicine

Chapel Hill, NC

[email protected]

Page 2: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Objectives

Know indications and techniques for using cryotherapy to treat common dermatologic conditions

Know indications and techniques for using electrocautery to treat common dermatologic conditions

Know side effects of cryotherapy and electrosurgery

Page 3: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Purpose: For rapid treatment of common skin conditions

Benign lesions: warts, seborrheic keratoses

Premalignant lesions: actinic keratoses Malignant tumors: Basal cell/squamous

cell carcinomas MUST KNOW THE DIAGNOSIS

Page 4: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Tissue destruction: -10 to -20 C. Malignant cell kill: -40 to -50 C.

Chemical refrigerants -70 to -94 C. Cold cryoprobes -90 C. Liquid Nitrogen -196 C.

Page 5: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Chemical Refrigerants

Verruca-Freeze Low start-up costs Useful for satellite

offices Not approved treatment

for malignant lesions

Page 6: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Verruca Freeze

Speculum size (2-12 mm) that encompasses lesion

1 “freeze” cycle =

» Fill speculum with spray 1/8- 1/4 inch (3-6 seconds)

» Allow fluid to evaporate (20-25 sec.) 130 “freezes” per cannister $200 start-up costs Long shelf life- 4-5 years

Page 7: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryoprobes

Nitrous oxide cryoguns Tanks with cart, hand gun, pressure

gauge and regulator Useful if liquid nitrogen not available

Page 8: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Nitrous Oxide

Put water soluble gel to lesion Select probe size Apply activated cryogun probe tip to skin

Page 9: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen

Advantages for clinician Cheap after set-up costs Easy to learn Multiple lesions at one time Do not need assistant to perform

Page 10: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen

Advantages for patient No local anesthetic needed Pain tolerable No sutures Wound care relatively easy

Page 11: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen

Disadvantages for clinician Start-up costs $1000 Storage facilities Filling canisters

Page 12: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen

Boiling point -196 C. Cellular destruction d/t:

» ice crystal formation» cellular dehydration» protein and enzymatic denaturization

Destruction more pronounced with:» rapid freeze» slow thaw cycle

Page 13: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen: Equipment

Liquid nitrogen Storage tank= Dewars 2-30 L, filled q 3-4 weeks Costs:

Tanks: Holding time Costs» 2 L 48 hrs $200» 10 L 6-8 weeks $475» 20 L 8-12 weeks $535» 30 L 14-16 weeks $620

Page 14: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen: Equipment

Filling Dewars; pouring, ladles or devices Devices affixed to dewar:

Ladels Valve: $310 Tube: $150

Page 15: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Liquid Nitrogen: Equipment

Thermos bottle with hole and cotton tipped swab orCry-AC Spray/cryogun (C-tip, mini-gun)

10 oz 16 oz 12 oz $670 $670 $650 12 hr 24 hr 24 hr

Page 16: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Frozen areas turn white = “freezeball” or “iceball”

Depth of freeze should be 1 X radius of freeze

Lethal Zone» Tissue temp < -20 C.» 2-3.5 mm inward from outer margin iceball

Freeze 2-3 mm beyond lesion edge

Page 17: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Remember ….. Always best to underfreeze rather than

overfreeze Hold canister perpendicular to skin Usually 2-3 freeze/thaw cycles

Page 18: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Cotton tipped swabs

Informed consent-oral vs written

Page 19: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Freezeball Time

Freckles/lentigos: 3-5 seconds Small papules: 5-10 seconds Seborrheic Keratoses: 30-40 seconds Actinic keratoses: 40-60 seconds SCCa/BCCa: 80-90 seconds

Page 20: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Freezeball Size

1mm- freckles/lentigos 1-2 mm- most benign skin lesions 2-3 mm- most warts 3-4 mm- most actinic keratoses 4-6 mm- superficial SCCa, BCCa

Page 21: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Thermocouple

$500 for temperature monitor and thermocouple needle

Page 22: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Effectiveness

Low Vascular lesions: e.g. angiomas Achrochordans

Page 23: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Effectiveness

Medium Xanthelasma Dermatofibroma Keloid Molluscum Prurigo nodularis Sebaceous hyperplasia

Page 24: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Effectiveness

Medium-High Seborrheic keratosis Verruca * Condyloma acuminata Lentigo Freckles

Page 25: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

Verruca: » Often resistant» Warts on hands» Plantar warts» Flat warts

Page 26: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Effectiveness

High Actinic keratosis Superficial Basal Cell Carcinoma Superficial Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Page 27: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Superficial BCCa/SCCa

Establish pathological diagnosis first Success rates > 95%

Page 28: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Special Populations

Children » In general avoid b/c pain» Use EMLA cream if needed

Useful modality for those on anticoagulants, those with pacemakers and those allergic to anesthetics

Page 29: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

DO NOT FREEZE If you do not know diagnosis Recurrent skin cancers Melanoma or any possibility Morpheaform BCCA Lip neoplasms Nasolabial fold cancers Compromised circulation

Page 30: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

BE CAREFUL ABOUT FREEZING Lesions on/near the eye Lesions on the fingers/elbows Lesions over shins, ears, genitals Lesions near nails

Page 31: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery

BE CAREFUL ABOUT FREEZING Patients with dark skin Patients with Raynaud’s disease Patients on chronic steroids Patients with diabetes Patients with cold induced

urticaria/cryoglobulinemia

Page 32: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Side Effects

Short term: Pain and erythema Blister formation Hemorrhage Infection Pyogenic granuloma

Page 33: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Cryosurgery: Side Effects

Long term Nerve damage Pigmentary changes Hypertrophic scar formation Permanent nail dystrophy Recurrence of lesion Multiple visits may be needed

Page 34: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Purpose:» Destroy tissue» Excise tissue» Coagulation

Often done with curettage

Page 35: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Electrocautery: Hot electrode (vs cold electrodes) Electrodessication: Electrode inserted into/on skin

(“dries out” skin; “epilation” = fine dessication)

Fulguration: Electrode held away from skin (“fulgur” = lightening; shallow destruction and eschar)

Electrocoagulation: Used for hemostasis Electrosection: Used to cut tissue Radiosurgery: Electrosx. with radio frequencies

Page 36: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Electricator Hyfrecator Bantam Bovie Ritter Coagulator Surgitron

Page 37: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Advantages: Easy to use, rapid, useful, hemostasis while cutting, less infection

Disadvantages: Electric shocks and burns/fires, hypertrophic scars, “channeling” nerves, viral shedding, delayed bleeding, slower healing, histological distortion

Costs: $1000-2000

Page 38: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Indications Procedure Cherry angiomas dessication Achrocordans dessication/fulguration Telangiectasias dessication Small verrucae on hands fulguration Pyogenic granulomas fulguration Seb Keratoses fulguration Small BCCa or SCCa fulguration and curettage

Page 39: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Resistant Wart

Page 40: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.
Page 41: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.
Page 42: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Start at low power and increase slowly Use lowest power needed for tissue

destruction/cutting

Page 43: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery

Local anesthesia: EMLA, lidocaine Avoid ethyl chloride, alcohol wipes, and

oxygen Keep field dry (Aluminum chloride) Mask and ventilation Fire extinguisher

Page 44: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery and Curettage (C&D)

Useful for small BCCa or SCCa Local anesthetic Sharp 2 mm, 3 mm curettes Scrape in different directions until “firm”

Page 45: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery and Curettage (C&D)

Electrodessicate base and 2 mm skin Repeat total of three times Control bleeding with Monsel’s solution Wound instructions and saucerization

Page 46: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery vs Cryosurgery

Verrucae and AK’s- Cryosurgery Condyloma- Electrosurgery

(Transmission of HPV through vapors)

Page 47: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery vs Excision

Excision preferred for histology and to minimize tissue destruction

Electrosurgical excision acceptable at times

Avoid both on feet if at all possible

Page 48: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Electrosurgery and ....

Pacemakers Metal pins Melanoma

Page 49: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

Conclusions

Cryosurgery and elctrosurgery are safe, effective and can be done quickly

Know the diagnosis first Perform patient education before the

procedure

Page 50: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.
Page 51: Cryosurgery and Electrosurgery Adam O. Goldstein, MD Associate Professor UNC Dept Family Medicine Chapel Hill, NC aog@med.unc.edu.

That….that…that….that’s...

That’s all folks!!!!!!!!!!!!!

THE END