Genre
- Journal Article
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-mum 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.
MCMASTER UNIV,HAMILTON L8V 5C2,ONTARIO,CANADA.; WYMAN, DR, HAMILTON REG CANC CTR,699 CONCESS ST,HAMILTON L8V 5C2,ONTARIO,CANADA.
NEW YORK; DIV JOHN WILEY & SONS INC 605 THIRD AVE, NEW YORK, NY 10158-0012
WILEY-LISS
PT: J; NR: 14; TC: 31; J9: LASER SURG MED; PG: 6; GA: KA047
Source type: Electronic(1)
Language
- English
Subjects
- PHOTOCOAGULATION
- LASER
- surgery
- INTERSTITIAL
- TISSUE