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      Far-ultraviolet laser ablation of atherosclerotic lesions

      , , ,
      Lasers in Surgery and Medicine
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Excimer laser surgery of the cornea.

          The excimer laser, which produces light in the far-ultraviolet portion of the spectrum, allows precise removal of corneal tissue through a photochemical laser-tissue interaction. This interaction is not thermal and does not involve optical breakdown; rather, it directly breaks organic molecular bonds without tissue heating. We used this process of ablative photodecomposition to remove corneal tissue in a series freshly enucleated cow eyes. Applying the far-ultraviolet light in short intense pulses permitted us to control the depth of the incision with great precision. We found that 1 joule/cm2 ablates corneal tissue to a depth of 1 micron. Adjacent tissue suffered no thermal damage and the stromal lamellae adjacent to the incision showed no evidence of disorganization.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Lasers in Surgery and Medicine
            Lasers Surg. Med.
            Wiley-Blackwell
            01968092
            10969101
            1984
            1984
            : 4
            : 2
            : 201-206
            Article
            10.1002/lsm.1900040212
            82d90961-c70f-45ff-b02e-b1a3793aa2b3
            © 1984

            http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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