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In vitro study of the effects of Nd:YAG laser probe parameters on bovine oral soft tissue excision

โœ Scribed by Perry, Dorothy A.; Goodis, Harold E.; White, Joel M.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
567 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-8092

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โœฆ Synopsis


Background and objectives:

Lasers are now used for intraoral, soft tissue procedures. the effects of nd:yag probes on cutting efficiency and temperature rise were evaluated in vitro.

Study design/materials and methods:

Three hundred twenty-micron 400-microns, 500-microns, and 600-microns probes were used to ablate bovine gingiva, mucosa, and tongue at various power and frequency settings. thermocouples positioned under the subjacent cortical bone measured temperature rise. tissue samples were evaluated histologically.

Results:

Mean pooled temperature rise was 1 degree c at 3 w and 1.4 degrees c at 5 w. excision width ranged from 0..63 mm to 0.79 mm at tested settings, cutting depths from 0.19 mm to 0.49 mm, lateral and deep coagulation from 0.27 mm to 0.62 mm.

Conclusion:

Temperature rise in bone was related to increased power. cutting efficiency of laser probes was not significantly improved by increased power. probes of 320 to 500 microns provided efficient cutting at 3 w and 5 w, thus reducing the potential for unacceptable temperature rise in bone.


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