Paper
17 May 1996 Infrared measurement of thermal constants in laser-irradiated scleral tissue
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Abstract
Laser scleral buckling (LSB) experiments were performed by irradiating human cadaver eyes with a focused beam from a 2.1-micrometer Ho:YAG laser. Spatially and temporally resolved temperature maps of the sclera were inferred from infrared images of the tissue's thermal radiation. An infrared focal-plane camera operating in the 3- to 5-micrometer wavelength interval was used for the measurements, from which we derived absorption and thermal diffusivity coefficients of the scleral tissue, along with the temperature dependence of these coefficients. A thermal-response model was developed, which describes the tissue surface temperature in response to a train of laser pulses, given the pulse repetition rate, beam fluence, spot size, and total energy delivered. This model provides guidance for optimization of laser-irradiation parameters for LSB treatment.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jamie D. Rhead, Aravinda Kar, Glenn D. Boreman, Fabrice Manns, Mikio Sasoh M.D., and Jean-Marie A. Parel "Infrared measurement of thermal constants in laser-irradiated scleral tissue", Proc. SPIE 2673, Ophthalmic Technologies VI, (17 May 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.240200
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Tissues

Absorption

Temperature metrology

Infrared radiation

Pulsed laser operation

Natural surfaces

Sclera

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