Procedure ยท Physical
Cryotherapy
Cryotherapy uses liquid nitrogen (โ196ยฐC) delivered via spray or contact probe to destroy tissue by intracellular ice formation, vascular stasis and immune-mediated injury. Routine for actinic keratosis and small superficial BCC / Bowen's; rapid, cheap, no anaesthetic required.
CurrentLast reviewed 25 March 2026
Indications
- Actinic keratosis (first-line for isolated hyperkeratotic lesions).
- Small superficial BCC (alternative to topical / surgical for low-risk lesions).
- Small Bowen's disease lesions in well-vascularised sites (avoid lower leg).
- Viral warts, seborrhoeic keratoses, molluscum, dermatofibroma โ non-oncological.
- Palliative for inoperable cutaneous metastases.
Not appropriate for invasive cSCC, melanoma, recurrent BCC, morphoeic / infiltrative BCC, or any lesion where histology has not been established.
Technique
Spray (open-spray)
- Hold cryogun perpendicular ~1 cm above lesion.
- Spray to produce ice ball extending 1โ2 mm beyond clinical lesion margin.
- For AK: single freeze 5โ10 seconds.
- For superficial BCC / Bowen's: double freeze-thaw cycle, 10โ30 seconds each (depending on lesion).
- Allow complete thaw between cycles.
Contact probe
Used for delicate sites (eyelid). Less aggressive but more controlled.
Aftercare
- Counsel patient: blister within hours, crust within 1โ2 days, healing 2โ6 weeks.
- Mild analgesia if needed; cool compress.
- Keep dry; no specific dressing required.
- Sun protection of treated site to minimise hypopigmentation.
Side effects & cautions
- Pain during and shortly after treatment.
- Blistering, crusting, occasional infection.
- Hypopigmentation โ frequent and persistent in Fitzpatrick IIIโVI; warn explicitly.
- Hyperpigmentation in some skin types.
- Scarring (usually minimal but unpredictable).
- Atrophy and telangiectasia at treatment site.
- Cold urticaria, cryoglobulinaemia, Raynaud's โ relative contraindications.
- Avoid lower-leg lesions in elderly patients with poor wound healing.
- Risk of nerve injury at sites where cutaneous nerves are superficial (e.g. lateral knee โ peroneal).
References
- Andrews MD. Cryosurgery for common skin conditions. Am Fam Physician; 2004.
- de Berker D, McGregor JM, Hughes BR. British Association of Dermatologists' guidelines for the care of patients with actinic keratosis 2017. Br J Dermatol. 2017;176(1):20-43.
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