Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Lasers in Medical Science 4/2005

01-04-2005 | Original Article

Femtosecond laser for glaucoma treatment: a study on ablation energy in pig iris

Authors: B. K. A. Ngoi, D. X. Hou, L. H. K. Koh, S. T. Hoh

Published in: Lasers in Medical Science | Issue 4/2005

Login to get access

Abstract

Safe and effective laser ophthalmic surgery requires a fine balance between the efficiency of laser delivered and the degree of collateral side damage. The laser–ocular tissue interaction process is reliant on three main variables, namely, wavelength, pulse duration, and deposited energy. A certain amount of energy is needed to achieve ablation, while too much energy can result in unwanted collateral thermal damage. In our work the relationship between energy deposition and ablation effect is studied by an in-vitro experiment using an 800-nm wavelength 150 fs-pulse-duration laser system. This experiment aims to validate the probability of decreasing the supplied energy during glaucoma surgery by femtosecond laser. Our results show that less energy is needed using femtosecond laser than that using a longer pulse laser.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Fiscella RD (2002) Pharmacological considerations in the treatment of glaucoma. Manag Care 11:16–20 Fiscella RD (2002) Pharmacological considerations in the treatment of glaucoma. Manag Care 11:16–20
2.
go back to reference Thompson KP, Ren QS, Parel JM (2002) Therapeutic and diagnostic application of lasers in ophthalmology. In: Waynant RW (ed) Lasers in medicine. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp 211–245 Thompson KP, Ren QS, Parel JM (2002) Therapeutic and diagnostic application of lasers in ophthalmology. In: Waynant RW (ed) Lasers in medicine. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp 211–245
3.
go back to reference Rizvi NH (2003) Femtosecond laser micromachining: current status and applications. RIKEN Rev 50:107–112 Rizvi NH (2003) Femtosecond laser micromachining: current status and applications. RIKEN Rev 50:107–112
4.
go back to reference Konig K, Krauss O, Riemann I (2002) Intratissue surgery with 80 MHz nanojoule femtosecond laser pulses in the near infrared. Opt Express 10:171–176 Konig K, Krauss O, Riemann I (2002) Intratissue surgery with 80 MHz nanojoule femtosecond laser pulses in the near infrared. Opt Express 10:171–176
5.
go back to reference Serbin J, Bauer T, Fallnich C, Kasenbacher A, Arnold WH (2002) Femtosecond lasers as a novel tool in dental surgery. Appl Surface Sci 8101:1–4 Serbin J, Bauer T, Fallnich C, Kasenbacher A, Arnold WH (2002) Femtosecond lasers as a novel tool in dental surgery. Appl Surface Sci 8101:1–4
6.
go back to reference Fan CH, Sun J, Longtin JP (2002) Breakdown threshold and localized electron density in water induced by ultrashort laser pulses. J Appl Phys 91:2530–2536CrossRef Fan CH, Sun J, Longtin JP (2002) Breakdown threshold and localized electron density in water induced by ultrashort laser pulses. J Appl Phys 91:2530–2536CrossRef
7.
go back to reference Sacks ZS, Kurtz RM, Juhasz T, Mourau GA (2002) High precision subsurface photodisruption in human sclera. J Biomed Opt 7:442–450CrossRef Sacks ZS, Kurtz RM, Juhasz T, Mourau GA (2002) High precision subsurface photodisruption in human sclera. J Biomed Opt 7:442–450CrossRef
Metadata
Title
Femtosecond laser for glaucoma treatment: a study on ablation energy in pig iris
Authors
B. K. A. Ngoi
D. X. Hou
L. H. K. Koh
S. T. Hoh
Publication date
01-04-2005
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Lasers in Medical Science / Issue 4/2005
Print ISSN: 0268-8921
Electronic ISSN: 1435-604X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10103-004-0323-9

Other articles of this Issue 4/2005

Lasers in Medical Science 4/2005 Go to the issue