Lasers Surg Med 1980;1(1):93-101;
Goldman JA, Chiapella J, Casey H, Bass N, Graham J, McClatchey W,
Dronavalli RV, Brown R, Bennett WJ, Miller SB, Wilson CH, Pearson
B, Haun C, Persinski L, Huey H, Muckerheide M.
Thirty people with classical
or definite rheumatoid arthritis received laser exposure to a Q-switch
neodymium laser that operated at 1.06 micrometer with an output of
15 joules/cm2 for 30 nsec. One hand was lased at the proximal interphalangeal
(PIP) and metacarpal phalangeal (MCP) joints, whereas the other hand
was sham lased. The patient, physician, and occupational therapy evaluators
did not know which hand was being lased. Twenty-one patients noted
improvement of both their MCP and PIP joints of both hands during
laser therapy. Twenty-seven noted improvement of their PIP joints
and 26 noted improvement of the MCP joints during therapy. Heat, erythema,
pain, swelling, and tenderness all improved with time in both hands,
but the lased hand had more significant improvement in erythema and
pain. There was also significant improvement
in grasp and tip pressure on the lased side. The level of circulating
immune complexes as measured by platelet aggregation decreased during
lasing. The improvement may be related to laser exposure. The exact
role that laser radiation has upon rheumatoid arthritis and its mechanism
of action remain to be elucidated.
Publication Types
Clinical Trial MID: 7038361
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Conclusion
Treated hands improved
compared to controls, erythema, pain, swelling, grasp, tip pressure
all improved.