Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Letter to the Editor
2010:76:4;429-431
doi: 10.4103/0378-6323.66603
PMID: 20657137

Use of a wood's lamp as a Ultra-Violet light source to improve the speed and quality of suction blister harvesting

Feroze Kaliyadan, S Venkitakrishnan, Jayasree Manoj
 Department of Dermatology, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala, India

Correspondence Address:
Feroze Kaliyadan
Department of Dermatology, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala - 26
India
How to cite this article:
Kaliyadan F, Venkitakrishnan S, Manoj J. Use of a wood's lamp as a Ultra-Violet light source to improve the speed and quality of suction blister harvesting. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2010;76:429-431
Copyright: (C)2010 Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology

Sir,

Suction blister grafting (SBG) is an established modality of treatment for stable vitiligo. One of the major limitations of SBG is the time taken for the blister production. Different options have been tried to improve the speed and quality of blisters created - like cryo, ultraviolet (UV) light, [1] Infrared light [2] and injection of local anesthetic over the donor site. [3] We aimed to study whether a relatively cheap and handy instrument like a Wood′s lamp can be used as a UV source to improve suction blister harvesting. Eight patients with stable vitiligo were selected for blister harvesting and grafting. All the blisters were raised using 20 cc syringes with the same vacuum pressure (350 mm of Hg, with a microdermabrasion machine used to create the vacuum [4] ) and the antero-lateral aspect of both thighs was used as the donor site in all cases. In all patients one of the thighs was exposed to a Wood′s lamp for 20 min (without the UV tubes touching the skin). The vacuum was released simultaneously at both test and control sites when sufficient number of blisters of an adequate size were produced. Complete blisters [5] were further scored for quality of blisters - based on uniformity and size, arbitrarily from 1 to 3. Suction blisters were attempted to be raised at 58 sites, eight sites did not produce any blistering (three irradiated and five non-irradiated sites), of the rest, complete blisters were formed in 37 sites of which 24 were from the UV-irradiated site while 13 were from the non-irradiated site. For the blister quality -65 points were obtained for the irradiated sites (average 2.7), and 30 points for non-irradiated sites (average 2.3). Another interesting incidental observation was that time taken for uniform pigmentation in the recipient site was lesser for sites in which the graft was taken from the irradiated sites only. (This was only a casual observation as we found complete pigmentation within two months in at least two cases where the graft used was only from the irradiated site. We agree that it might have been only coincidental). A Wood′s lamp, we suggest, might be a handy and effective modality to speed up blister formation as well as to improve the quality of the formed blisters.

One of the major limitations of SBG for vitiligo is the time taken for blister formation. The patient has to remain with the suction syringes/cups kept on for at least 2-3 h. Various methods have been tried in the past to reduce the time taken for blister formation. Hanafusa et al, have reported that the injection of local anesthetic sub-epidermally can not only reduce the blister production time but also ensures that the patient feels much more comfortable and pain-free. The injection of local anesthetic in the blister site is routinely done in most centers, though the site is often not sub-epidermal. [3] According to Gupta et al, the Suction Blister Induction Time (SBIT) is directly proportional to the diameter of the suction syringe. The other important factors mentioned in their article include - the site of the suction blister, age of the subject, amount of vacuum created, temperature, intradermal injection of saline, corticosteroid-induced atrophy, and pretreatment of the site with PUVA (Psoralens with Ultra-Violet-A). Use of 10 or 20-ml syringes as suction cups and 300 mmHg pressure were considered optimum by Gupta et al.[1] As mentioned earlier, in our study too temperature might have had a role as all the patients felt some amount of heat when Wood′s lamp was applied. Laxmisha et al, have interestingly mentioned the use of an infrared lamp for improving SBIT. Possibly here too heat might have played a role. [2]

UV irradiation is known to result in marked changes in skin connective tissue, such as degeneration of collagen, and abnormal elastosis. The mechanism of connective tissue damage and blister formation by UV has not been clarified in detail. Both both UVB and PUVA increase the levels of gelatinases in human skin which might have a role in inducing secondary connective tissue damage and blistering. [6]

The incidental finding of better pigmentation we mentioned in our study might possibly be explained by the Immediate Pigment Darkening (IPD) induced by UV light. When human skin is irradiated with UV radiation (340-400 nm) there is an immediate pigment response, termed Immediate Pigment Darkening (IPD). Proposed mechanisms of IPD are controversial. They include photooxidation of "premelanin," changes in the distribution pattern of microfilaments and microtubules, movement of melanosomes to melanocyte dendrites, increased transfer of melanosomes to keratinocytes, and changes in the melanosome distribution pattern in keratinocytes. [7],[8] Could it be that UV exposure may thus actually increase the yield in terms of melanin production over the recipient site?

Wood′s lamp was used basically because it is a cheap and handy device (compared to something like Narrow B and UV-B tubes). The only aim was to study whether something cheap and handy like Wood′s lamp can actually help in improving suction blister harvesting.

The major limitation of the study, apart from being a pilot study, is that we could not rule out the effect of heat, which all patients had felt when they were exposed to Wood′s lamp, which itself might have contributed to improving blister formation.

References
1.
Gupta S, Kumar B. Suction blister induction time: 15 minutes or 150 minutes? Dermatol Surg 2000;26:754-6.
[Google Scholar]
2.
Laxmisha C, Babu A, Mohan Thappa D. Letter: Infrared lamps for faster suction blister induction. Dermatol Surg 2006;32:1111-2.
[Google Scholar]
3.
Hanafusa T, Yamaguchi Y, Nakamura M, Kojima R, Shima R, Furui Y, et al. Establishment of suction blister roof grafting by injection of local anesthesia beneath the epidermis: Less painful and more rapid formation of blisters. J Dermatol Sci 2008;50:243-7.
[Google Scholar]
4.
Kaliyadan F, Manoj J, Venkitakrishnan S. Using a microdermabrasion machine as a suction blister device. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2008;74:392-3.
[Google Scholar]
5.
Laxmisha C, Thappa DM. Reliable site for suction blister induction and harvesting. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2005;71:321-4.
[Google Scholar]
6.
Koivukangas V, Kallioinen M, Autio-Harmainen H, Oikarinen A. UV irradiation induces the expression of gelatinases in human skin in vivo. Acta Derm Venereol 1994;74:279-82.
[Google Scholar]
7.
Kollias N, Bykowski JL. Immediate pigment darkening thresholds of human skin to monochromatic (362 nm) ultraviolet A radiation are fluence rate dependent. Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed 1999;15:175-8.
[Google Scholar]
8.
Honigsmann H, Schuler G, Aberer W, Romani N, Wolff K. Immediate pigment darkening phenomenon: A reevaluation of its mechanisms. J Invest Dermatol 1986;87:648-52.
[Google Scholar]

Fulltext Views
1,962

PDF downloads
1,052
Show Sections