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The Picosecond Laser Effects on Tattoo Removal and Metabolic Pathways

Authors Qu Y, Feng X, Liang J, Liu J, Gao D

Received 2 August 2021

Accepted for publication 16 September 2021

Published 24 September 2021 Volume 2021:14 Pages 1343—1350

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CCID.S332265

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Jeffrey Weinberg



Yan Qu,1 Xien Feng,2 Jin’ning Liang,2 Junru Liu,3 Dong Gao2

1Department of Dermatology, The Affiliated Hospital of Weifang Medical University, Weifang, Shandong, 261031, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Dermatology, Yantai Yuhuangding Hospital, Yantai, 264003, Shandong, People’s Republic of China; 3Department of Dermatology, Yantai Yuhuangding Hospital Laishan Branch, Yantai, 264003, Shandong, People’s Republic of China

Correspondence: Dong Gao Email [email protected]

Objective: We aimed to investigate picosecond laser effects regarding rat tattoo removals. We systematically detected the metabolic pathways considering tattoo pigment particles in rat models.
Materials and Methods: We employed fluorescein to mark the tattoo dye and utilized a pattern needle to prepare tattoo on rat so as to establish the tattoo removal effects of picosecond laser methods employing animal models. We applied a picosecond laser to process the tattoo and observed the effects along with metabolic pathways for tattoo removal via pathology and imaging approaches.
Results: Based on the results of characterization, pathology and fluorescence, we discovered that the picosecond laser could effectively remove the pigment particles on rat skin, part of which would be metabolized out of the body through the circulatory system. After picosecond laser treatment, the fluorescence intensity of the rat skin engraved part was gradually weakened. At 8 h after the treatment, the metabolic organs had weak fluorescence, and there was no fluorescence in the metabolic organs at 12 h and 24 h after the treatment.
Conclusion: The picosecond laser had perfect tattoo removal effects, which could be utilized as a reference for clinical tattoo removal.

Keywords: tattoo, picosecond laser, pattern engraving, dye

Introduction

Tattoo is a conventional custom, which remains popular in many areas all over the world. However, for various reasons, tattoos would lead to side effects and complications. Infection is a common complication of tattoos. Although most tattoos utilize aseptic techniques, infections may occur due to improper preparation of the tattoo site, incomplete disinfection of equipment, contamination of dyes or products, or improper care after the tattoo or careless personal hygiene. Tumors might also be induced by implantation of undesirable dyes. How to securely and effectively remove tattoos has become an increasing demand among the tattoo population. Currently, many hospitals lack unified operating specifications and standards for tattoo removal technologies. People applied electrocautery, freezing, peeling grinding and skin grafting to remove tattoos, though the effect was not very satisfactory. With the emergence of laser technology, in the 1960s, Laub et al employed ruby laser to treat human tattoos,1 which gradually initiated the usage of various laser techniques to treat tattoos. Q-switched laser treatment of tattoos has gradually become the gold standard.2 Although the selective thermal effect of Q-switched laser has good advantages in breaking pigments and reducing skin damage, there are still unsolved issues, such as long treatment intervals, multiple treatments, residual tattoo pigments and contours, and scars after treatment.3 Q-switched Nd-YAG 1064 nm laser was based upon the theory of selective photothermal effect, and only melanin and black pigment were its target, while it was unable to remove professional tattoo dyes, such as red and green.4

Picosecond laser was gradually being applied by clinical staff to remove tattoos.5 Nevertheless, due to the lack of relevant theoretical and data support, the removal effect was not good in real application processes. Skin discoloration and other phenomena frequently occur, which made patients suffer.6 Clinical issues such as how the dye was metabolized, whether it would cause secondary damage to the human body, etc., remained unknown.7–14 The current study utilized rat tattoo model to observe the effect of picosecond laser on tattoo removal.

Materials and Methods

SD Rat Models

One hundred SD male rats5 weighing 160∼190 g were purchased from Jinan Pengyue Experimental Animal Breeding Co., Ltd. [SCXK (LU)20140007]. We bred SD rats from Wistar rats with albino coat, which were widely employed in pharmacology, toxicology, efficacy and GLP experiments. Breeding and experiments were carried out in the barrier environment facility of Yantai Langdi Biotechnology Co., Ltd. [SYXK (LU)20170028]. Ethics Committee at Shanghai Skin Disease Hospital, Tongji University School of Medicine approved the investigations (approval no. Idswanimall). Guidelines for the ethical review of laboratory animal welfare15 were followed for the welfare and treatment of the laboratory animals.

Preparation of Rat Tattoo Model

After the SD rats were adaptively reared for 1 w, we depilated them on the back with a depilatory agent. The area was 3×3 cm2. After being wiped and disinfected with alcohol, we pierced tattoo dye marked with CY-5 leveraging 0.5 mm pattern needle until it was bare. The engraved area is 1×1 cm2, and the depth is 0.5 mm. Our team fed tattooed SD rats normally in the dark. After 15 d, the inflammatory reaction disappeared and the pigment was stabilized. We performed the first tattoo removal with picosecond laser, and the second tattoo removal was performed on the 30 d after tattoo. The treatment was delivered with a 1064-nm neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd: YAG) picosecond laser (PicoWay, Syneron Candela) with the zoom 1064-nm handpiece, spot size 3 mm, and fluence 2.8 ~ 4.0 J/cm2. The experiments were done with chloral hydrate and Cy-5 labeled tattoo dye.

Characterization Observation

During the experiments, we observed inflammatory reaction, scab, pigment, and blistering. We also detected redness and color fading of the tattoo site after picosecond laser treatment. The effects of picosecond laser on the pigment removal from the surface were detected.

In vivo Fluorescence Observation

0 h, 0.5 h, 1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 8 h, 12 h, 24 h after the first picosecond laser, we randomly selected 3 SD rats from each group at each slot, which were put into the animal in vivo fluorescence imaging system utilizing 650 nm laser excitation with 670nm reception. We detected the distribution and disappearance of fluorescence in rats at different time points and determined the path of dye metabolism.

Fluorescence Detections of Metabolic Organs

At the same time points to in vivo fluorescence observations, 3 SD rats were randomly sacrificed and their liver, kidney, intestine, skin, etc., were taken out. Afterwards, we placed the harvested organs in the in vivo fluorescence imaging system using 650nm laser excitation with 670nm reception. We detected the fluorescence intensity in each organ at different time points so as to further judge the dye metabolism path.

Histological Detections

After the tattoo pigment was stabilized after picosecond laser treatments, we randomly sacrificed 3 SD rats from each group at each time point. The skin tissue from the tattoo was obtained, part of which was fixed with 10% neutral formalin solution. We performed conventional dehydration, paraffin embedding, sectioning, and HE staining to observe the changes in the tissue structure as well as pigment dyes at the tattoo under an optical microscope. The sampling times were: 15 d after the tattoo, 0 h; 12 h; 15 d after the first picosecond laser treatment and 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment.

Laser Confocal Microscopic Detection

At the above time points, we extracted the skin tissues with tattoos. The tissues were frozen and sectioned under a laser confocal microscope. We detected the changes of the fluorescence that carried by the dye in the tissue such as dispersion and disappearance. The technical parameters that included were excitation wavelength – 650 nm, emission wavelength – 670 nm, laser intensity 9%, 650 V. Sampling time points were: 15 d after tattooing; 0 h, 4 h, 8 h, 12 h, 24 h, 15 d after the first picosecond laser treatment; and the corresponding time points after the second picosecond laser treatment.

Statistical Analysis

SPSS 26.0 statistical software SPSS version 26.0 for Windows (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) was utilized to analyze the data and compare differences between groups. The measurement data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD), and the count data were expressed in percentage. The area of dye and pigment fading after irradiation with different energy-level lasers were tested through R. After adjusting P values, a pairwise comparison was made. P < 0.05 was regarded as statistically significant.

Results

Modeling Results

Within 3 d after the engraving, redness and swelling at the engraved skin were obvious. On days 5 and 7, the engraved area showed scabs. On the 10 d, the scabs fell off, and the tattoo dye stabilized. On the 15 d, the dye color at the engraved site was deep with no more changes (Figure 1A). The pathological section of skin tissue demonstrated that at the position of the middle layer of dermis (Figure 1B), many dye particles aggregated and there were no changes on days 11 and 15. According to the HE staining results and our previous work,5 the dye could be determined and the carved part was stabilized. Therefore, the tattoo model was established successfully.

Figure 1 Tattoo dyeing diagram (A) and pathological section (B) on the 15 d.

General Observation Results

According to the general observations and our previous work,5 the dye state of the rat skin became stable after 15 d from the dye was engraved. During the subsequent feeding process, the depth of dye on the rat skin was gradually reduced. After about 48 h, it was stabilized. The area of the tattoo was reduced, and the dye appeared scattered with no more flakes. The front became lighter, with about 1/2 of those before treatment. The dye was constantly reduced at a later stage, but the reduction was smaller. After the second picosecond laser, the state of the rat tattoo dye was similar to that of the first time. About 15 d after the treatment, the rat tattoo basically disappeared. The skin condition at the engraving is shown in Figure 2. The tattoo area was counted as 100%, and the color depth was counted as 100% 15 d after engraving. After treatment, the dye fade was calculated, and the status of tattoos at each time point was provided. 15 d after the first picosecond laser treatment, about 40% tattoos remained. 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment, about 2% remained.

Figure 2 General observation results. (A) 10 d after the first engraving. (B) 15 d after the first picosecond laser. (C) 15 d after the second picosecond laser.

In vivo Fluorescence Imaging Results

Through the observation of in vivo fluorescence imaging at different time points, fluorescence was mainly concentrated in the engraved parts 0 h after the picosecond laser treatment. The fluorescence gradually became stronger in the organs and tail at 0.5 h ~ 4 h after the treatment. The rats were anesthetized at 2 h. Results suggested that different intensities of fluorescence appeared in the intestine, kidney, bladder and other locations (Figure 3A and B). Fluorescence was also found in the rat urines between 2 h ~ 4 h. At 8 h, there was almost no fluorescence in the rat indicating that it was metabolized, or the fluorescence was quenched. No fluorescence was detected in the rat at 12 h and 24 h (Figure 3C).

Figure 3 (A) Fluorescence imaging results at 2 h (Normal rat on the right, tattooed rat on the left). (B) Fluorescence imaging results after 2 h anatomy. (C) Fluorescence imaging results at 12 h (Normal rat on the right, tattooed rat on the left).

Observation Results of Fluorescence Intensity of Metabolic Organs

In order to eliminate the interference of the rat’s own tissue fluorescence, the rats were anesthetized and sacrificed after the detection of each in vivo fluorescence imaging time point. The metabolic organs were removed, and all metabolic organs were tested in the in vivo fluorescence imaging system. At 0 h, there was no fluorescence in the metabolic organs. At 0.5 h, fluorescence was found in the intestines, liver, and other organs. At 2 h, fluorescence was found in the liver, intestines, kidneys, bladder and other organs, and the fluorescence intensity was strong (Figure 4A). At 4 h, the fluorescence intensity of the liver, intestine, kidney, bladder, etc., was weaker than that of the samples collected at 2 h (Figure 4B). In the urine samples collected between the two time points, weaker fluorescence was found. At 8 h, the metabolic organs had weak fluorescence (Figure 5). There was no fluorescence in the metabolic organs at 12 h and 24 h (Figure 4C).

Figure 4 Observation of fluorescence intensity of metabolic organ (A) 2 h. (B) 4 h. (C) 12 h.

Figure 5 Masson staining results. (A) 15 d after the tattoo. (B) 12 h after the first picosecond laser treatment. (C) 15 d after the first picosecond laser treatment. (D) 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment.

Histological Experiment Results

From the results of the skin tissue slices after two picosecond laser treatments, the picosecond laser caused a large number of “cavities” in the deep layer of the skin. They were mainly concentrated between the epidermis and the dermis, and some were located in the dermis. From the Masson staining pictures at each time point, the dye in the skin tissue was in a state of aggregation and clusters 15 d after the tattoo. It was discovered that the dye particles were broken into tiny particles by laser 0 h and 12 h after the first picosecond laser treatment, and the particle numbers gradually decreased over time. By 15 d after laser treatment, the residual amount of dye particles was about 1/2 of that before the treatment, and the dye disappeared during the process. In the tissue section, we found that there were macrophages and other cells near the laser channel. From 0 h to 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment, the dye particles continued to metabolize and disappear, and finally, there was almost no particulate dye in the tissue (Figure 5).

Laser Confocal Fluorescence Results

Laser confocal observation of the fluorescence intensity of skin tissue at the tattoo site revealed that before laser picosecond laser treatment, the fluorescence emitted by the CY5 labeled dye after excitation was concentrated on the skin tissue, and the intensity was high (Figure 6A). The average fluorescence per unit area was 28,965. After the first picosecond laser treatment, the fluorescence in the tissue section at 0 h was dispersed, and the intensity was slightly weaker than that before the treatment. At 4 h, the fluorescence dispersion state was obvious, and the fluorescence intensity was significantly weakened. The areas were about 80% of that before the treatment and the average fluorescence intensity per unit area is 21,560 (Figure 6B). Data at 8 h, 12 h, 24 h illustrated that the fluorescence intensity was further weakened, and the fluorescence area gradually shrank. The data on the 15 d after treatment verified that the fluorescence was scattered throughout the tissue. In the fluorescent area, the overall fluorescence intensity was about 43% (average fluorescence intensity per unit area was 12,432) of that before the treatment (Figure 6C). On the 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment, the average fluorescence intensity per unit area was only 126 (Figure 6D).

Figure 6 Laser confocal fluorescence observation results. (A) Before picosecond laser treatment. (B) 4 h after the first picosecond laser treatment. (C) 15 d after the first picosecond laser treatment. (D) 15 d after the second picosecond laser treatment.

Discussions

Picosecond laser has great advantages in treating benign pigment diseases. Since the pulse width of the picosecond laser is about 10 ~ 100 times shorter than that of the traditional short pulse (nanosecond) laser, the high peak wave of this ultrashort pulse laser can produce a strong photomechanical effect on the body instead of traditional nanosecond laser. Because of its photothermal effect, picosecond laser is more effective in the treatments of tattoos as well as other diseases than traditional short-pulse lasers.

As the picosecond laser is a relatively new technology, most of the existing related researches are limited to the clinical observation of laser on pigmented diseases, scars, photoaging and other diseases.16 In one study, the control group utilized red tattoo particles. After the shock wave effect of the short pulse Q-switched laser, relatively small black particles were formed. In terms of safety, after PicoWay picosecond laser treatment, it is easier to find complete cell membranes and organelles under the electron microscope. The transmission of the shock wave effect is only for the pigment, and there is not much heat energy to destroy the surrounding tissues. Therefore, it is not applicable in clinical practice.17 Under the premise of achieving the same therapeutic effects, the energy of picosecond laser treatment is only 1/3 or even 1/4 of that in Q-switched laser. When the treatment energy is reduced, the comfort of the treatment process is improved, and the safety of the overall treatment is improved as a result.18 Compared with the traditional short-pulse nanosecond laser, the ultra-pulse picosecond laser has better absorption of pigments, which greatly reduces the damage to surrounding tissues that is caused by non-specific photothermal effects and has less inflammation as well as lower incidence of staining.19,20

Because the size of tattoo particles is between 40 ~ 300 nm in the body, the TRT of most tattoo pigments is in the picosecond range. When the pulse width is compressed, the photomechanical effect of picoseconds makes it dependent on selective spectral absorption. For instance, the pulse width of 532 nm picoseconds matches the particle size of yellow tattoo pigments, so the removal rate for refractory yellow tattoos is also compared.8 In terms of safety, picosecond lasers produce less tissue damage and have better removal effects compared to nanosecond lasers.21 A single-blind separation random experiment showed that the 1064/532 nm picosecond laser has a removal rate of more than 75% on tattoo pigments, and its effectiveness is stronger than the 1064/532 nm short pulse Q-switched laser.22

From the current study, we concluded that the dye particles were broken into tiny particles by the picosecond laser at the engraved area, which were directly metabolized out of the body through macrophage phagocytosis or other pathways. We discovered that the tattoo dye labeled with CY-5 could stably exist in the skin marking area of rats like ordinary dyes. After picosecond laser treatments, the tattoo dye was broken into tiny particles at the marking position, possibly passing through the tissue part. It entered the circulatory system, which was metabolized out of the body. Two picosecond laser treatments could effectively remove all dyes from the engraved parts, indicating that the picosecond laser had a good effect towards tattoo removal.

In humans, histological evidence indicates that all tattoo particles are found in macrophages, fibroblasts and mast cells around three months post-insertion. While in our investigations, we found that rat skin might process tattoo ink insertion faster than human skin.5 Although present research conducted explorations on the effect of picosecond laser on tattoo removal and the metabolic pathways of tattoo dyes, it needs in-depth investigations on the removal mechanism and removal pathways. Subsequent work in the area would be carried out for clinical applications in the mechanism to provide further supports.

Conclusions

In this study, CY5 fluorescein was employed to label the tattoo dye, and the labeled dye was engraved on the rat skin to realize real-time tracking in rats. The established rat tattoo model was processed by picosecond laser, and fluorescein was excited by the in vivo fluorescence system and laser confocal system. The results demonstrated that after picosecond laser treatment, the fluorescence intensity of the rat skin engraved part was gradually weakened. After two treatments, no fluorescence was detected in the engraved part. At the same time, it was found that after each laser treatment, different metabolic organs will have different intensities of fluorescence at different time points. Some dyes may be directly metabolized out of the body through the skin. Combined with characterization observation results and histological observation results, it was further confirmed that picosecond laser could remove tattoos effectively.

Acknowledgments

This research was funded by Major Scientific and Technological Innovation Program from the Department of Science and Technology of Shandong Province (grant no. 2019JZZY011103). Authors would like to express their gratitude to editor and anonymous reviewers for the suggestive comments, which helped improve this presentation.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

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