Psoralens are a class of pharmaceutical agents commonly used to treat several cutaneous disorders. When irradiated with a mode-locked titanium:sapphire (Ti:sapphire) laser tuned to 730 nm, an aqueous solution of 4'hydroxymethyl-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen (HMT) emits blue light, The emission spectrum is centered at 452 nm and is identical to that obtained by one-photon excitation with UVA excitation, and its magnitude depends quadratically on the intensity of laser excitation, These results suggest that two-photon excitation occurs to a potentially photochemically active state, To estimate the two-photon absorption cross section, it was first necessary to measure the emission quantum yield of HMT using 365 mm excitation at room temperature that resulted in a value of 0.045 +/- 0.007. The two-photon absorption cross section of HMT at 730 nm is therefore estimated to be 20 x 10(-50) cm(4) s(20 Goppert-Mayer). The excited-state photophysics and photochemistry of psoralens suggest potential applications to cutaneous phototherapy in diseases such as psoriasis and dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa.