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Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple

In recent years, interest in medical application of lasers especially as a surgical alternative is considerably increasing due to their distinct advantages such as non-contact intervention, bacteriostasis, less traumatization, minimal invasiveness, decreased bleeding and less heat damage. The presen...

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Autores principales: Gholami, Asghar, Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Molood, Ebrahimi, Marjan, Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Milad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3967429/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24695375
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author Gholami, Asghar
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Molood
Ebrahimi, Marjan
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Milad
author_facet Gholami, Asghar
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Molood
Ebrahimi, Marjan
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Milad
author_sort Gholami, Asghar
collection PubMed
description In recent years, interest in medical application of lasers especially as a surgical alternative is considerably increasing due to their distinct advantages such as non-contact intervention, bacteriostasis, less traumatization, minimal invasiveness, decreased bleeding and less heat damage. The present study aimed to evaluate the temperature changes and the consequent released thermal stress in cortical bone caused by an Erbium:yttrium aluminum garnet (Er:YAG) laser (Fideliss 320A, Fotona Inc., Deggingen, Germany) during osteotomy, using mathematical computation by means of Maple software, version 9.5 (Maplesoft, a division of Waterloo Maple Inc., Canada). The results obtained here were compared with the experimental measurements using Er:YAG laser in the osteotomy clinics. A bone slab with thickness of 1 mm was simulated in Maple software. Then, an Er:YAG laser emitting 100 μs pulses at a wavelength of 2940 nm were modeled. Two different clinical settings of the Er:YAG laser with 200 mJ and 400 mJ energies, both with 100 μs exposure and 500 μs silence were studied. To investigate the temperature distribution in the cortical bone, the time-dependent heat conduction equations were defined and solved in the Maple software. Finally, by defining the heat distribution function in the Maple, thermal stress in the bone was investigated. Results of the computations showed that, on the bone irradiated area (center of the bone surface) the maximum temperature rise was 0.8°C and 1.6°C, for 200 mJ and 400 mJ Er:YAG laser exposure, respectively. The temperature rise reached to its minimum at radial distances of 1.2 cm from the point of irradiated area for 200 mJ laser while it was 1.5 cm for 400 mJ laser. For 200 mJ laser the maximum derived radial (σ(rr)), axial (σ(zz)) and azimuthally (σ(θθ)) stress components were 0.20, 0.16 and 0.08 MPa, respectively. While, for 400 mJ laser the maximum derived σ(rr), σ(zz) and σ(θθ) stress components were 0.39, 0.31 and 0.16 MPa, respectively. These results confirm that use of 100 μs Er:YAG laser pulses with 500 μs silence at 200 and 400 mJ energies minimizes thermal tissue damage for the laser osteotomies, without continued water cooling (irrigation) on the exposed area.
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spelling pubmed-39674292014-04-02 Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple Gholami, Asghar Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Molood Ebrahimi, Marjan Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Milad J Med Signals Sens Short Communication In recent years, interest in medical application of lasers especially as a surgical alternative is considerably increasing due to their distinct advantages such as non-contact intervention, bacteriostasis, less traumatization, minimal invasiveness, decreased bleeding and less heat damage. The present study aimed to evaluate the temperature changes and the consequent released thermal stress in cortical bone caused by an Erbium:yttrium aluminum garnet (Er:YAG) laser (Fideliss 320A, Fotona Inc., Deggingen, Germany) during osteotomy, using mathematical computation by means of Maple software, version 9.5 (Maplesoft, a division of Waterloo Maple Inc., Canada). The results obtained here were compared with the experimental measurements using Er:YAG laser in the osteotomy clinics. A bone slab with thickness of 1 mm was simulated in Maple software. Then, an Er:YAG laser emitting 100 μs pulses at a wavelength of 2940 nm were modeled. Two different clinical settings of the Er:YAG laser with 200 mJ and 400 mJ energies, both with 100 μs exposure and 500 μs silence were studied. To investigate the temperature distribution in the cortical bone, the time-dependent heat conduction equations were defined and solved in the Maple software. Finally, by defining the heat distribution function in the Maple, thermal stress in the bone was investigated. Results of the computations showed that, on the bone irradiated area (center of the bone surface) the maximum temperature rise was 0.8°C and 1.6°C, for 200 mJ and 400 mJ Er:YAG laser exposure, respectively. The temperature rise reached to its minimum at radial distances of 1.2 cm from the point of irradiated area for 200 mJ laser while it was 1.5 cm for 400 mJ laser. For 200 mJ laser the maximum derived radial (σ(rr)), axial (σ(zz)) and azimuthally (σ(θθ)) stress components were 0.20, 0.16 and 0.08 MPa, respectively. While, for 400 mJ laser the maximum derived σ(rr), σ(zz) and σ(θθ) stress components were 0.39, 0.31 and 0.16 MPa, respectively. These results confirm that use of 100 μs Er:YAG laser pulses with 500 μs silence at 200 and 400 mJ energies minimizes thermal tissue damage for the laser osteotomies, without continued water cooling (irrigation) on the exposed area. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2013 /pmc/articles/PMC3967429/ /pubmed/24695375 Text en Copyright: © Journal of Medical Signals and Sensors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Communication
Gholami, Asghar
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Molood
Ebrahimi, Marjan
Baradaran-Ghahfarokhi, Milad
Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title_full Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title_fullStr Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title_full_unstemmed Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title_short Thermal Effects of Laser-osteotomy on Bone: Mathematical Computation Using Maple
title_sort thermal effects of laser-osteotomy on bone: mathematical computation using maple
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3967429/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24695375
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