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Ablation of bone and methacrylate by a prototype mid-infrared erbium:YAG laser

โœ Scribed by J. Stuart Nelson; Lindy Yow; L.-H. Liaw; Lachlan Macleay; Rhonda B. Zavar; Arie Orenstein; William H. Wright; Jeffrey J. Andrews; Michael W. Berns


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
884 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-8092

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โœฆ Synopsis


An erbium:YAG laser was used to generate 200-microseconds pulses of mid-infrared 2.94-microns light in both the single and multimode configurations. Laser pulses were focused on the surfaces of both rabbit long bones and methacrylate blocks, and the tissue response was examined histologically. The depth of thermal injury was determined by ocular micrometry. Over all energy levels tested, the erbium:YAG laser produced ablation of bone and methacrylate with minimal thermal damage to adjacent tissue. Increasing the laser energy per pulse produced increasingly wider and deeper grooves in both bone and methacrylate. However, such increase in laser energy produced a proportionately greater increase in the zone of thermal injury in methacrylate as compared with bone. These studies suggest the feasibility of a surgical erbium:YAG laser in orthopaedics and other forms of ablative surgery.


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Mid-Infrared laser ablation of the corne
โœ Dr. Qiushi Ren; Vasan Venugopalan; Kevin Schomacker; Thomas F. Deutsch; Thomas J ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1992 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 774 KB

The ablation thresholds and patterns of collateral damage in cornea produced by Er:YAG (2.94 pm) and Er:YSGG (2.79 pm) lasers were measured. Two different pulse durations, 200 ps (normal spiking mode) and 100 ns (Q-switched mode), were used at both wavelengths. In the normal spiking mode, damage zon