In vitro investigation of stone ablation efficiency, char formation, spark generation, and damage mechanism produced by thulium fiber laser

To investigate stone ablation characteristics of thulium fiber laser (TFL), BegoStone phantoms were spot-treated in water at various fiber tip-to-stone standoff distances (SDs, 0.5 ~ 2 mm) over a broad range of pulse energy (E p , 0.2 ~ 2 J), frequency (F, 5 ~ 150 Hz), and power (P, 10 ~ 30 W) setti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urolithiasis 2023-11, Vol.51 (1), p.124-124, Article 124
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Junqin, Mishra, Arpit, Medairos, Robert, Antonelli, Jodi, Preminger, Glenn M., Lipkin, Michael E., Zhong, Pei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To investigate stone ablation characteristics of thulium fiber laser (TFL), BegoStone phantoms were spot-treated in water at various fiber tip-to-stone standoff distances (SDs, 0.5 ~ 2 mm) over a broad range of pulse energy (E p , 0.2 ~ 2 J), frequency (F, 5 ~ 150 Hz), and power (P, 10 ~ 30 W) settings. In general, the ablation speed (mm 3 /s) in BegoStone decreased with SD and increased with E p , reaching a peak around 0.8 ~ 1.0 J. Additional experiments with calcium phosphate (CaP), uric acid (UA), and calcium oxalate monohydrate (COM) stones were conducted under two distinctly different settings: 0.2 J/100 Hz and 0.8 J/12 Hz. The concomitant bubble dynamics, spark generation and pressure transients were analyzed. Higher ablation speeds were consistently produced at 0.8 J/12 Hz than at 0.2 J/100 Hz, with CaP stones most difficult yet COM and UA stones easier to ablate. Charring was mostly observed in CaP stones at 0.2 J/100 Hz, accompanied by strong spark-generation, explosive combustion, and diminished pressure transients, but not at 0.8 J/12 Hz. By treating stones in parallel fiber orientation and leveraging the proximity effect of a ureteroscope, the contribution of bubble collapse to stone ablation was found to be substantial (16% ~ 59%) at 0.8 J/12 Hz, but not at 0.2 J/100 Hz. Overall, TFL ablation efficiency is significantly better at high E p /low F setting, attributable to increased cavitation damage with less char formation.
ISSN:2194-7236
2194-7228
2194-7236
DOI:10.1007/s00240-023-01501-y