Automated 3D bone ablation with 1,070nm ytterbium-doped fiber laser enabled by inline coherent imaging

Background and Objective Laser osteotomy bears well-identified advantages over conventional techniques. However, lack of depth control and collateral thermal damage are barriers to wide clinical implementation. Flexible fiber delivery and economical benefits of ytterbium-doped fiber lasers make them...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLasers in surgery and medicine Vol. 48; no. 3; pp. 288 - 298
Main Authors Yin, Chenman, Ruzzante, Sacha W, Fraser, James M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.03.2016
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Summary:Background and Objective Laser osteotomy bears well-identified advantages over conventional techniques. However, lack of depth control and collateral thermal damage are barriers to wide clinical implementation. Flexible fiber delivery and economical benefits of ytterbium-doped fiber lasers make them desirable for laser osteotomy. In this work, we demonstrate automated bone ablation with a 1,070nm industrial-scale fiber laser to create 3D target structures with minimal thermal side-effects. Materials and Methods Fresh and dry ex vivo cortical bone samples are ablated using 50-100 mu s laser pulses of 15-30mJ. In situ inline coherent imaging monitors ablation dynamics with micron precision and on microsecond timescales. Ablation depth is extracted by on-the-fly processing of ICI data, enabling feedback control of depth (via laser pulse number). Final ablated morphology, measured by an ex situ stylus profiler, is compared to the target shape. Histological examination is performed to quantify the thermal side-effects of laser ablation. Results Percussion drilled hole depth is highly variable for fixed laser parameters (880 plus or minus 151 mu m on fresh bone and 1038 plus or minus 148 mu m on dry bone) due to nondeterministic ablation. ICI-enabled depth control is implemented to achieve precise ablation of complex 3D features. The RMS deviation between target and ablated morphology is 12.6 mu m. The heat-affected zone is found to be 5-10 mu m on fresh and dry bone. Conclusions An ytterbium-doped fiber laser is utilized for cortical bone ablation with limited thermal side-effects. In situ real-time ICI measurement enables characterization of bone ablation dynamics. Furthermore, ICI closed-loop feedback realizes depth-controlled ablation on heterogeneous bone. This proof-of-principle study shows great promise for ICI-guided laser osteotomy. Lasers Surg. Med. 48:288-298, 2016.
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ISSN:0196-8092
1096-9101
DOI:10.1002/lsm.22459