1. Photoablation of inner limiting membrane and inner retinal layers using the Erbium:YAG-laser: an in vitro study.
- Author
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Hoerauf H, Brix A, Winkler J, Droege G, Winter C, Birngruber R, Laqua H, and Vogel A
- Subjects
- Animals, Erbium, In Vitro Techniques, Swine, Laser Therapy instrumentation, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures instrumentation, Retina surgery
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: To explore the potential of Er:YAG-laser irradiation for precise and tractionless retinal tissue and inner limiting membrane ablation., Materials and Methods: We used free-running Er:YAG-laser irradiation (lambda = 2.94 microm) transmitted either through a 10 cm long low-OH-quartz fiber or a 2 m long sapphire fiber that produced a more homogenous light distribution at the fiber tip. Retinal ablation in porcine retinal explants was performed under air or perfluorodecaline (PFD). Ablation depth was evaluated by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and from histologic sections., Results: A radiant exposure of 5.0 J/cm(2) delivered through a low-OH-quartz fiber and PFD caused a complete transsection of the neurosensory retina. Radiant exposures between 3.5 and 2.0 J/cm(2) resulted in marked variations of ablation depth and adjacent thermal damage. By contrast, laser pulses of 4.0 and 3.0 J/cm(2) transmitted through the sapphire fiber produced more homogenous defect patterns and less thermal damage. Close to the ablation threshold, with 1.0-2.0 J/cm(2), ablation was limited to a 10-20 microm thin layer of the neural retina., Conclusions: We achieved in vitro ablation of inner retinal layers, but could not produce selective and reproducible ILM removal.
- Published
- 2006
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