Dependence of subcellular damage on various laser beam parameters
โ Scribed by Shirley S. Oyog; Michael J. Smith; Willem P. van de Merwe
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 708 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0196-8092
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A cw argon laser operating at the multiline UV TEM00 mode was used to create lesions in the nucleoli of fibroblast cells. Laser powers emitted through the objective were varied from 5-8 mW and laser pulse durations ranged from 50 to 600 ms. Our study showed lesion diameters ranging from 0.7 microns to 2.9 microns and an average lesion diameter of 1.77 microns. All cells were exposed to at most a laser spotsize of 2.2 microns diameter and for a laser spotsize of this diameter, we calculated that the central 18.3% of the total energy was in the central area of 0.7 microns diameter. We also found that as little as 0.3 mJ of energy could produce a lesion. No absolute threshold correlation was found between the size or type of lesion and the laser parameters used.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Photocoagulation was performed ex vivo between tissue slabs by delivering continuous-wave laser energy from an optical fiber either directly, or by depositing the energy into a 2.4 mm diameter steel sphere at the fiber tip. The dependence of photocoagulation lesions on the following variables was as
The gas phase reactions of metal plasma with alcohol clusters were studied by time of flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS) using laser ablation-molecular beam (LAMB) method. The significant dependence of the product cluster ions on the molecular beam conditions was observed. When the plasma acted on the