Paper
23 February 2006 Multiphoton imaging of corneal tissue with near-infrared femtosecond laser pulses: corneal optical tomography and its use in refractive surgery
Bao-Gui Wang, Karsten Koenig, Iris Riemann, Harald Schubert, Karl-Juergen Halbhuber
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The two-photon-mediated autofluorescence and second harmonic generation (SHG) are acting as a novel diagnostic tool to perform tissue optical tomography with submicron resolution. The three-dimensional corneal ultrastructure of whole depth can be probed without any staining or mechanical slicing. Compared with photodisruptive surgical effects occurring at TW/cm2 light intensity, multiphoton imaging can be induced at MW-GW/cm2 photon intensity. The multiphoton microscopy based on nonlinear absorption of femtosecond laser pulses at the wavelength of 715-930nm emitted from solid-state Ti: sapphire system is being used as a precise non-invasive monitoring tool to determine the interest of region, to visualize and to verify the outcomes in the invivo intrastromal laser nanosurgery. More interesting, the activated keratocytes have been also observed in-vivo 24 hours after the laser nanosurgery with this system. Overall, these data suggest that multiphoton microscopy is a highly sensitive and promising technique for studying the morphometric properties of the microstructure of the corneal tissue and for assessing the intrastromal nanosurgery. With the help of the multiphoton-mediated imaging, the next generation of laser refractive surgery approaches based on the nonamplified femtosecond lasers with higher precision and less complications are being evaluated systematically.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Bao-Gui Wang, Karsten Koenig, Iris Riemann, Harald Schubert, and Karl-Juergen Halbhuber "Multiphoton imaging of corneal tissue with near-infrared femtosecond laser pulses: corneal optical tomography and its use in refractive surgery", Proc. SPIE 6089, Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences VI, 60891M (23 February 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.640594
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Multiphoton microscopy

Laser therapeutics

Femtosecond phenomena

Tissues

Surgery

Optical tomography

Tissue optics

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