id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_nijostrtxvh4vljw6enxeny5qi Jennifer L. Wardlaw Laser Therapy for Incision Healing in 9 Dogs 2019.0 .htm text/html 6023 516 67 Laser therapy increased the scar scale score, showed improved cosmetic healing, by day seven and continued to be significantly increased on day 21 compared to control dogs (p < 0.001). Looking at other laser therapy reports in the literature wound healing protocols vary from 1 to 40 J/cm2, consequently necessitating the continued need for controlled research studies in order to evaluate the efficacy of proposed protocols using specified power densities on specific target tissues for defined clinical indications (8, 12–17). This study attempts to objectively measure the ability of PBM induced by laser therapy to accelerate the healing time of surgically created wounds by using a previously described scar scale that corresponds with histopathology (18). Scar scale score of the study dogs was significantly associated with the day of the image (p < 0.0001), and whether laser therapy was used (p < 0.001), but not by reviewer (p = 0.9). ./cache/work_nijostrtxvh4vljw6enxeny5qi.htm ./txt/work_nijostrtxvh4vljw6enxeny5qi.txt