Paper
7 June 2000 Intrastromal refractive surgery by ultrashort laser pulses: side effects and mechanisms
Alexander Heisterkamp, Gero Maatz, Tammo Ripken, Holger Lubatschowski, Herbert Welling, Elke Luetkefels, Wolfgang Drommer, Wolfgang Ertmer
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Abstract
The Feasibility of refractive surgery with ultrashort laser pulses in the fs-regime was studied. The Experiments were performed with an Erbium fiberlaser oscillator, which was amplified by means of chirped pulse amplification in a Titanium-Sapphire regenerative amplifier. With this system pulse durations of 180 fs and pulse energies of up to some hundred (mu) J were possible. The photodisruption was performed in corneal tissue in order to create corneal incisions and lamellars. Surface quality and thermal damages of the cuts inside the tissue were studied with the help of micromorphological analysis, such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and histological sections. High level precision along with minimal thermal damage could be observed. Saline solution as a model substance was used for studying side effects as bubble formation and pressure transients. The pressure measurements were performed using broadband acoustic transducers. Gas bubbles were analyzed with respect to formation, dynamics, interaction and composition of different gas constituents with the help of flash photography and gas chromatography. The results demonstrate the minimal invasive treatment of corneal stroma by fs-photodisruption. Studies of secondary effects indicate, that additional processes have to be considered.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alexander Heisterkamp, Gero Maatz, Tammo Ripken, Holger Lubatschowski, Herbert Welling, Elke Luetkefels, Wolfgang Drommer, and Wolfgang Ertmer "Intrastromal refractive surgery by ultrashort laser pulses: side effects and mechanisms", Proc. SPIE 3908, Ophthalmic Technologies X, (7 June 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.387518
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Laser therapeutics

Cavitation

Cornea

Hydrogen

Pulsed laser operation

Laser vision correction

Picosecond phenomena

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