Paper
14 June 1999 Chemical decomposition of urinary stones during holmium-laser lithotripsy: I. Lack of a photomechanical effect
Kin Foong Chan, George J. Vassar, T. Joshua Pfefer, Joel M. H. Teichman M.D., Randolph D. Glickman, Susan T. Weintraub, Ashley J. Welch
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 3601, Laser-Tissue Interaction X: Photochemical, Photothermal, and Photomechanical; (1999) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.350023
Event: BiOS '99 International Biomedical Optics Symposium, 1999, San Jose, CA, United States
Abstract
The Ho:YAG laser commonly used for clinical lithotripsy of urinary stones typically emits 250-microsecond pulses at a wavelength of 2.12 micrometer and repetition rates of up to 10 Hz. This pulse duration is longer than the time required for a pressure wave to propagate beyond the optical penetration depth of this wavelength in water. Fast-flash photography was used to study the dynamics of urinary stone fragmentation by the Ho:YAG laser. Stone ablation began approximately 50 microseconds after the onset of the laser pulse, long before the collapse of the cavitation bubble at about 350 microseconds. Pressure measurements, made with a PVDF needle- hydrophone and correlated with the fast-flash images, indicated that the peak acoustical transient was less than 2 bars. Regardless of fiber orientation to the stone, no shockwaves were recorded at the beginning of the bubble, and the maximum pressure waves recorded at bubble collapse were approximately 20 bars. However, no fragmentation occurred during or subsequent to the bubble collapse. The measurements indicated that stone ablation was not due to a photomechanical effect.
© (1999) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kin Foong Chan, George J. Vassar, T. Joshua Pfefer, Joel M. H. Teichman M.D., Randolph D. Glickman, Susan T. Weintraub, and Ashley J. Welch "Chemical decomposition of urinary stones during holmium-laser lithotripsy: I. Lack of a photomechanical effect", Proc. SPIE 3601, Laser-Tissue Interaction X: Photochemical, Photothermal, and Photomechanical, (14 June 1999); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.350023
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KEYWORDS
Holmium

Acoustics

Pulsed laser operation

Laser energy

Laser therapeutics

Cavitation

Laser lithotripsy

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