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Abstract

During laser osteotomy surgery, plasma arises at the place of ablation. It was the aim of this study to explore whether a spectroscopic analysis of this plasma would allow identification of the type of tissue that was affected by the laser. In an experimental setup (Rofin SCx10, CO2 Slab Laser, wavelength 10.6 [mu]m, pulse duration 80 [mu]s, pulse repetition rate 200 Hz, max. output in cw-mode 100 W), the plasma spectra evoked by a pulsed laser, cutting 1-day postmortem pig and cow bones, were recorded. Spectra were compared to the reference spectrum of bone via correlation analysis. Our measurements show a clear differentiation between the plasma spectra when cutting either a bone or a soft tissue. The spectral changes could be detected from one to the next spectrum within 200 ms. Continuous surveillance of plasma spectra allows us to differentiate whether bone or soft tissue is hit by the last laser pulse. With this information, it may be possible to stop the laser when cutting undesired soft tissue and to design an automatic control of the ablation process.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
A spectroscopic approach to monitor the cut processing in pulsed laser osteotomy
Author
Henn, Konrad; Gubaidullin, Gail G; Bongartz, Jens; Wahrburg, Jürgen; Roth, Hubert; Kunkel, Martin
Pages
87-92
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jan 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
02688921
e-ISSN
1435604X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1461757076
Copyright
Springer-Verlag London 2013