Femtosecond laser-assisted selective reduction of neovascularization in rat cornea

Nonlinear multiphoton absorption induced by focusing near infrared (NIR) femtosecond (fs) laser pulses into a transparent cornea allows surgery on neovascular structures with minimal collateral damage. In this report, we introduce an fs laser-based microsurgery for selective treatment of rat corneal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Lasers in medical science 2014-07, Vol.29 (4), p.1417-1427
Hauptverfasser: Sidhu, Mehra S., Choi, Min-Yeong, Woo, Suk-Yi, Lee, Hyun-Kyu, Lee, Heung-Soon, Kim, Kyu-Jin, Jeoung, Sae Chae, Choi, Jun-Sub, Joo, Choun-Ki, Park, Il-Hong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nonlinear multiphoton absorption induced by focusing near infrared (NIR) femtosecond (fs) laser pulses into a transparent cornea allows surgery on neovascular structures with minimal collateral damage. In this report, we introduce an fs laser-based microsurgery for selective treatment of rat corneal neovascularizations (in vivo). Contiguous tissue effects are achieved by scanning a focused laser pulse below the corneal surface with a fluence range of 2.2–8.6 J/cm 2 . The minimal visible laser lesion (MVL) threshold determined over the corneal neovascular structures was found to be 4.3 J/cm 2 . Histological and optical coherence tomography examinations of the anterior segment after laser irradiations show localized degeneration of neovascular structures without any unexpected change in adjacent tissues. Furthermore, an approximately 30 % reduction in corneal neovascularizations was observed after 5 days of fs laser exposure. The femtosecond laser is thus a promising tool for minimally invasive intrastromal surgery with the aid of a significantly smaller and more deterministic photodisruptive energy threshold for the interaction between the fs laser pulse and corneal neovascular structures.
ISSN:0268-8921
1435-604X
DOI:10.1007/s10103-014-1545-0