Cargando…

Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics

In femtosecond laser ophthalmic surgery tissue dissection is achieved by photodisruption based on laser induced optical breakdown. In order to minimize collateral damage to the eye laser surgery systems should be optimized towards the lowest possible energy threshold for photodisruption. However, op...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hansen, Anja, Géneaux, Romain, Günther, Axel, Krüger, Alexander, Ripken, Tammo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Optical Society of America 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3675865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23761849
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/BOE.4.000852
_version_ 1782272607691735040
author Hansen, Anja
Géneaux, Romain
Günther, Axel
Krüger, Alexander
Ripken, Tammo
author_facet Hansen, Anja
Géneaux, Romain
Günther, Axel
Krüger, Alexander
Ripken, Tammo
author_sort Hansen, Anja
collection PubMed
description In femtosecond laser ophthalmic surgery tissue dissection is achieved by photodisruption based on laser induced optical breakdown. In order to minimize collateral damage to the eye laser surgery systems should be optimized towards the lowest possible energy threshold for photodisruption. However, optical aberrations of the eye and the laser system distort the irradiance distribution from an ideal profile which causes a rise in breakdown threshold energy even if great care is taken to minimize the aberrations of the system during design and alignment. In this study we used a water chamber with an achromatic focusing lens and a scattering sample as eye model and determined breakdown threshold in single pulse plasma transmission loss measurements. Due to aberrations, the precise lower limit for breakdown threshold irradiance in water is still unknown. Here we show that the threshold energy can be substantially reduced when using adaptive optics to improve the irradiance distribution by spatial beam shaping. We found that for initial aberrations with a root-mean-square wave front error of only one third of the wavelength the threshold energy can still be reduced by a factor of three if the aberrations are corrected to the diffraction limit by adaptive optics. The transmitted pulse energy is reduced by 17% at twice the threshold. Furthermore, the gas bubble motions after breakdown for pulse trains at 5 kilohertz repetition rate show a more transverse direction in the corrected case compared to the more spherical distribution without correction. Our results demonstrate how both applied and transmitted pulse energy could be reduced during ophthalmic surgery when correcting for aberrations. As a consequence, the risk of retinal damage by transmitted energy and the extent of collateral damage to the focal volume could be minimized accordingly when using adaptive optics in fs-laser surgery.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3675865
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Optical Society of America
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36758652013-06-11 Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics Hansen, Anja Géneaux, Romain Günther, Axel Krüger, Alexander Ripken, Tammo Biomed Opt Express Research-Article In femtosecond laser ophthalmic surgery tissue dissection is achieved by photodisruption based on laser induced optical breakdown. In order to minimize collateral damage to the eye laser surgery systems should be optimized towards the lowest possible energy threshold for photodisruption. However, optical aberrations of the eye and the laser system distort the irradiance distribution from an ideal profile which causes a rise in breakdown threshold energy even if great care is taken to minimize the aberrations of the system during design and alignment. In this study we used a water chamber with an achromatic focusing lens and a scattering sample as eye model and determined breakdown threshold in single pulse plasma transmission loss measurements. Due to aberrations, the precise lower limit for breakdown threshold irradiance in water is still unknown. Here we show that the threshold energy can be substantially reduced when using adaptive optics to improve the irradiance distribution by spatial beam shaping. We found that for initial aberrations with a root-mean-square wave front error of only one third of the wavelength the threshold energy can still be reduced by a factor of three if the aberrations are corrected to the diffraction limit by adaptive optics. The transmitted pulse energy is reduced by 17% at twice the threshold. Furthermore, the gas bubble motions after breakdown for pulse trains at 5 kilohertz repetition rate show a more transverse direction in the corrected case compared to the more spherical distribution without correction. Our results demonstrate how both applied and transmitted pulse energy could be reduced during ophthalmic surgery when correcting for aberrations. As a consequence, the risk of retinal damage by transmitted energy and the extent of collateral damage to the focal volume could be minimized accordingly when using adaptive optics in fs-laser surgery. Optical Society of America 2013-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3675865/ /pubmed/23761849 http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/BOE.4.000852 Text en ©2013 Optical Society of America author-open
spellingShingle Research-Article
Hansen, Anja
Géneaux, Romain
Günther, Axel
Krüger, Alexander
Ripken, Tammo
Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title_full Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title_fullStr Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title_full_unstemmed Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title_short Lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
title_sort lowered threshold energy for femtosecond laser induced optical breakdown in a water based eye model by aberration correction with adaptive optics
topic Research-Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3675865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23761849
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/BOE.4.000852
work_keys_str_mv AT hansenanja loweredthresholdenergyforfemtosecondlaserinducedopticalbreakdowninawaterbasedeyemodelbyaberrationcorrectionwithadaptiveoptics
AT geneauxromain loweredthresholdenergyforfemtosecondlaserinducedopticalbreakdowninawaterbasedeyemodelbyaberrationcorrectionwithadaptiveoptics
AT guntheraxel loweredthresholdenergyforfemtosecondlaserinducedopticalbreakdowninawaterbasedeyemodelbyaberrationcorrectionwithadaptiveoptics
AT krugeralexander loweredthresholdenergyforfemtosecondlaserinducedopticalbreakdowninawaterbasedeyemodelbyaberrationcorrectionwithadaptiveoptics
AT ripkentammo loweredthresholdenergyforfemtosecondlaserinducedopticalbreakdowninawaterbasedeyemodelbyaberrationcorrectionwithadaptiveoptics