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Interstitial laser photocoagulation: Nd:YAG 1064...
Journal article

Interstitial laser photocoagulation: Nd:YAG 1064 nm optical fiber source compared to point heat source

Abstract

Interstitial laser photocoagulation (ILP) was performed in vitro in lean bovine and chicken muscle by delivering 1.6 W of continuous-wave Nd:YAG laser energy (1064 nm) from a 400-microns core optical fiber for 300s. The resulting thermal coagulation lesion was consistently larger when the delivered energy was deposited into a small steel sphere than when it was delivered freely into the tissue. Mathematical modelling confirms this result. This preliminary study suggests that a point heat source produces a larger volume of thermal coagulation than a point optical source (1064 nm) delivering the same power.

Authors

Wyman DR; Whelan WM; Wilson BC

Journal

Lasers in Surgery and Medicine, Vol. 12, No. 6, pp. 659–664

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 1992

DOI

10.1002/lsm.1900120615

ISSN

0196-8092
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