Understanding the Role of Plasma Bullet Currents in Heating Skin to Mitigate Risks of Thermal Damage Caused by Low-Temperature Atmospheric-Pressure Plasma Jets
Abstrak
Low-temperature atmospheric-pressure plasma jets are generally considered a safe medical technology with no significant long-term side effects in clinical studies reported to date. However, there are studies emerging that show plasma jets can cause significant side effects in the form of skin burns under certain conditions. Therefore, with a view of developing safer plasma treatment approaches, in this study we have set out to provide new insights into the cause of these skin burns and how to tailor plasma treatments to mitigate these effects. We discovered that joule heating by the plasma bullet currents is responsible for creating skin burns during helium plasma jet treatment of live mice. These burns can be mitigated by treating the mice at a further distance so that the visible plasma plume does not contact the skin. Under these treatment conditions we also show that the plasma jet treatment still retains its medically beneficial property of producing reactive oxygen species in vivo. Therefore, treatment distance is an important parameter for consideration when assessing the safety of medical plasma treatments.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (14)
Shunya Hashimoto
Hideo Fukuhara
Endre J. Szili
Chiaki Kawada
Sung-Ha Hong
Yuta Matsumoto
Tatsuru Shirafuji
Masayuki Tsuda
Atsushi Kurabayashi
Mutsuo Furihata
Hiroshi Furuta
Akimitsu Hatta
Keiji Inoue
Jun-Seok Oh
Format Sitasi
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2023
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/plasma6010009
- Akses
- Open Access ✓