• Journal of the European Optical Society-Rapid Publications
  • Vol. 19, Issue 2, 2023032 (2023)
Karsten König1、2、*
Author Affiliations
  • 1Saarland University, Department of Biophotonics and Laser Technology, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany
  • 2JenLab GmbH, 12559 Berlin, Germany
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    DOI: 10.1051/jeos/2023032 Cite this Article
    Karsten König. Medical femtosecond laser[J]. Journal of the European Optical Society-Rapid Publications, 2023, 19(2): 2023032 Copy Citation Text show less
    Optical biopsies taken with the multimodal multiphoton tomograph. Left: vertical skin section. Right: horizontal 0.2x02.mm2 overlay section (blue: confocal reflectance, red: two-photon excited autofluorescence, green: SHG of collagen) in a skin depth of 80 μm.
    Fig. 1. Optical biopsies taken with the multimodal multiphoton tomograph. Left: vertical skin section. Right: horizontal 0.2x02.mm2 overlay section (blue: confocal reflectance, red: two-photon excited autofluorescence, green: SHG of collagen) in a skin depth of 80 μm.
    The commercial multiphoton tomograph DermaInspect (laser class 1M) for high-resolution tissue imaging with a tunable near infrared 80 MHz femtosecond laser and time-resolved single photon counting (TCSPC) received the certificate of conformity as a class 2a medical device in 2004.
    Fig. 2. The commercial multiphoton tomograph DermaInspect (laser class 1M) for high-resolution tissue imaging with a tunable near infrared 80 MHz femtosecond laser and time-resolved single photon counting (TCSPC) received the certificate of conformity as a class 2a medical device in 2004.
    The second generation of multiphoton tomographs MPTflex is easy to move and possesses an optical arm with a 360° measurement head. The MPTflex received the certificate of conformity as a medical device in 2010. Left: “conventional” MPTflex with two PMT detectors. Right: Two-beam multiphoton tomograph MPTflex-CARS with four PMT detectors to measure simultaneously time-resolved autofluorescence, SHG, and Raman signals of lipids/water.
    Fig. 3. The second generation of multiphoton tomographs MPTflex is easy to move and possesses an optical arm with a 360° measurement head. The MPTflex received the certificate of conformity as a medical device in 2010. Left: “conventional” MPTflex with two PMT detectors. Right: Two-beam multiphoton tomograph MPTflex-CARS with four PMT detectors to measure simultaneously time-resolved autofluorescence, SHG, and Raman signals of lipids/water.
    The novel multimodal multiphoton tomograph MPTcompact. The ultracompact fiber femtosecond laser is positioned inside the measurement head. A chiller and an optical arm are no longer required. The tomograph measures (i) 780 nm-excited autofluorescence of intratissue melanin, keratin, elastin, and the coenzymes NADH and flavins by time-correlated single photon counting, (ii) SHG at 390 nm from the collagen network, and (iii) confocal reflectance of the 780nm beam e.g., from the cell membranes. Furthermore, white-light images are provided for dermoscopy and laser beam location.
    Fig. 4. The novel multimodal multiphoton tomograph MPTcompact. The ultracompact fiber femtosecond laser is positioned inside the measurement head. A chiller and an optical arm are no longer required. The tomograph measures (i) 780 nm-excited autofluorescence of intratissue melanin, keratin, elastin, and the coenzymes NADH and flavins by time-correlated single photon counting, (ii) SHG at 390 nm from the collagen network, and (iii) confocal reflectance of the 780nm beam e.g., from the cell membranes. Furthermore, white-light images are provided for dermoscopy and laser beam location.
    The commercial medical device VISUMAX VM800 (laser class 3B) for refractive SMILE surgery and conventional “Femto-LASIK” in combination with the laser class 4 excimer laser MEL90. Source: ZEISS.
    Fig. 5. The commercial medical device VISUMAX VM800 (laser class 3B) for refractive SMILE surgery and conventional “Femto-LASIK” in combination with the laser class 4 excimer laser MEL90. Source: ZEISS.
    Corneal refractive surgery with the VISUMAX VM800. Source: ZEISS.
    Fig. 6. Corneal refractive surgery with the VISUMAX VM800. Source: ZEISS.
    The ophthalmic femtosecond laser platform FEMTO LDV Z8 for Femto-LASIK and Corneal Lenticue Extraction for Advanced Refractive Correction (CLEAR), source: ZIEMER.
    Fig. 7. The ophthalmic femtosecond laser platform FEMTO LDV Z8 for Femto-LASIK and Corneal Lenticue Extraction for Advanced Refractive Correction (CLEAR), source: ZIEMER.
    The medical femtosecond laser system SCHWIND ATOS FS can be employed for the SmartSight lenticule extraction, source: SCHWIND eye-tech-solutions.
    Fig. 8. The medical femtosecond laser system SCHWIND ATOS FS can be employed for the SmartSight lenticule extraction, source: SCHWIND eye-tech-solutions.
    Karsten König. Medical femtosecond laser[J]. Journal of the European Optical Society-Rapid Publications, 2023, 19(2): 2023032
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