Cryosurgery Flashcards
What is the mechanism of action for cryotherapy?
- Extracellular dehydration from the formation of ice crystals in the extracellular space causing an extracellular hyperosmotic gradient that dehydrates adjacent cells
- Membrane rupture from continued freezing that causes intracellular ice crystals which puncture the membrane
- Vasoconstriction: initial freezing which compounds damage due to anoxia
- Vasodilation: After thawing, compensatory vasodilation releases harmful free radicals into the affected tissue
What is the boiling point of liquid nitrogen?
-196 degrees C
What is the boiling point of solid carbon dioxide?
-76 degrees C
At what temperature do melanocytes die?
-5 degrees C
At what temperature do keratinocytes die at?
-20 degrees C to -30 degrees C
At what temperature do fibroblasts freeze at?
-35-40 degrees C (least sensitive)
At what temperature do most benign lesions need to be frozen to?
-25 degrees C
To what temperature do malignant lesions need to be frozen to?
-50 degrees C
What is the optimal freezing/thawing cycle?
Rapid freezing followed by slow thawing
don’t put your finger on a frozen area to get it to unthaw faster
What are the 4 types of cryosurgery delivery?
- Open technique: most commonly performed; liquid nitrogen is released through tips, needles, cannulas, or cones
- Chamber technique: Modification of “open technique”; typically used only for malignancies cryogen is released into a chamber. The turbulence within the chamber leads to lower temperatures and faster than the open type
- Closed technique: Uses a probe to deliver the thermal insult; attached to the cryogen line and is a closed system
- Intralesional technique: Cryogen is injected directly into tissue via either a cannula or needle
What is the open cryotherapy technique?
This is the most common type, canister with a nozzle that sprays liquid cryogen
What is a semi-open technique of cryotherapy?
Confined spray using a cone, speculum of an otoscope, etc. Must use the right size of cone
What is the semi-closed chamber method of cryotherapy and what is it good for?
It uses a metal chamber that is connected to the spray bottle on one end and rubber-tipped chamber on the other. Potent cryogen, used for skin cancers and cutaneous metastases
What is a closed system of cryotherapy and what is it good for?
This is a metal chamber that circulates the cryogen but is not open. The cold metal of the chamber is pressed directly on the lesion –> rapid and potent freezing. Good for deep and fast freezing