Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Interaction dynamics of fs-laser induced cavitation bubbles and their impact on the laser-tissue-interaction of modern ophthalmic laser systems

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

A today well-known laser based treatment in ophthalmology is the LASIK procedure which nowadays includes cutting of the corneal tissue with ultra-short laser pulses. Instead of disposing a microkeratome for cutting a corneal flap, a focused ultra-short laser pulse is scanned below the surface of biological tissue causing the effect of an optical breakdown and hence obtaining a dissection. Inside the tissue, the energy of the laser pulses is absorbed by non-linear processes; as a result a cavitation bubble expands and ruptures the tissue. Hence, positioning of several optical breakdowns side by side generates an incision. Due to a reduction of the amount of laser energy, with a moderate duration of treatment at the same time, the current development of ultra-short pulse laser systems points to higher repetition rates in the range of even Megahertz instead of tens or hundreds of Kilohertz. In turn, this results in a pulse overlap and therefor a probable occurrence of interaction between different optical breakdowns and respectively cavitation bubbles of adjacent optical breakdowns. While the interaction of one single laser pulse with biological tissue is analyzed reasonably well experimentally and theoretically, the interaction of several spatial and temporal following pulses is scarcely determined yet. Thus, the aim of this study is to analyse the dynamic and interaction of two cavitation bubbles by using high speed photography. The applied laser pulse energy, the energy ratio and the spot distance between different cavitation bubbles were varied. Depending on a change of these parameters different kinds of interactions such as a flattening and deformation of bubble shape or jet formation are observed. The effects will be discussed regarding the medical ophthalmic application of fs-lasers. Based on these results a further research seems to be inevitable to comprehend and optimize the cutting effect of ultra-short pulse laser systems with high (> 500 kHz) repetition rates.

© 2011 OSA/SPIE

PDF Article
More Like This
Dynamic and interaction of fs-laser induced cavitation bubbles for analyzing the cutting effect

N. Tinne, S. Schumacher, V. Nuzzo, T. Ripken, and H. Lubatschowski
7373_0L European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2009

Physics of temporal pulse-to-pulse interaction and its consecution to future generation ophthalmic laser systems

N. Tinne, G. Knoop, N. Kallweit, H. Lubatschowski, A. Krüger, and T. Ripken
880302 European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2013

Laser-induced cavitation bubble reconstruction based on the Fresnel optical propagation

Luis Felipe Devia-Cruz, Victoria Ramos, Santiago Camacho-López, Victor Ruiz-Cortés, Francisco Pérez-Gutiérrez, and Guillermo Aguilar
LTu4A.41 Latin America Optics and Photonics Conference (LAOP) 2014

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.