Paper
17 August 1994 Physics of laser-induced stress wave propagation, cracking, and cavitation in biological tissue
Lev T. Perelman, Douglas Albagli, Marta Dark, Jonathan Schaffer, Charles von Rosenberg, Irving Itzkan, Michael S. Feld
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Abstract
In the regime where the specific time for propagation of stress waves is longer than the laser pulse duration, but shorter than the heat dissipation time, stress can be one of the governing mechanisms of laser-induced ablation of biological tissue. In such inertially confined regimes, knowing the mechanical properties of biological tissue an the kinetics of cracking (in hard tissue represented by bone) and cavitation (in soft tissue represented by meniscus) are important to understand the ablation process. An experimental technique has been developed to study laser-induced stress generation and mechanical properties of tissue in such regimes. This technique is based on monitoring the tissue surface after laser irradiation, using an interferometer that can measure submicron surface displacements on a nanosecond time scale. The subablation threshold laser-induced surface displacements can be related to the stress within the tissue and mechanical properties of the tissue. The surface movement of aqueous solution and meniscus tissue irradiated by 7.5-ns pulses of 355 nm light was consistent with growth and collapse of cavitation bubble. Bone movement was qualitatively consistent with theoretical predictions obtained by solving the equation of motion both analytically and numerically. In the regime where laser beam radius and optical absorption depth are comparable, it is shown that a full 3D analysis is necessary to understand the observed results.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Lev T. Perelman, Douglas Albagli, Marta Dark, Jonathan Schaffer, Charles von Rosenberg, Irving Itzkan, and Michael S. Feld "Physics of laser-induced stress wave propagation, cracking, and cavitation in biological tissue", Proc. SPIE 2134, Laser-Tissue Interaction V; and Ultraviolet Radiation Hazards, (17 August 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.182930
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KEYWORDS
Laser tissue interaction

Cavitation

Natural surfaces

Wave propagation

Physics

Tissues

Bone

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